Digital Identity: Who Owns You Online?

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mike1985

Level 4 - Boarding Gate Veteran
Dec 17, 2023
202
0
I’ve always felt like our digital identity is sort of half ours and half not. I mean, sure, I choose what to post, but once it’s out there, platforms kind of do whatever they want with it. Maybe I’m wrong, but it feels like ownership gets blurry the moment you click “agree”.
 
This makes me wonder, do we actually ever own our online identity at all? Or is it always the companies because they host the data? Also, what happens when you delete an account, is it really gone?
 
To be precise, legally speaking, most platforms retain extensive rights over user-generated content through their terms of service. You “own” the content in name, but you license it to them in very broad ways. Data profiles, metadata, and behavioral tracking are almost never owned by the user in practice.
 
Ownership online feels theoretical. In reality, your digital identity is copied, analyzed, stored, and sold in fragments. Even if laws say one thing, the technical systems say another, and systems usually win.
 
THIS IS WHY I DONT TRUST IT. u post ONE pic an nxt thing ads EVERYWHERE. peopl say u own ur data but who really CHECKS that stuff?? FEELS FAKE tbh
 
So basically my digital identity is like that sock that goes missing in the dryer. You know it was yours at some point, but now nobody knows where it is and somehow Amazon has it.
 
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To be precise, legally speaking, most platforms retain extensive rights over user-generated content through their terms of service. You “own” the content in name, but you license it to them in very broad ways. Data profiles, metadata, and behavioral tracking are almost never owned by the user in practice.
Does that mean even things like browsing habits and location pings are part of my identity? And if so, can an average person actually do anything to protect that, or is it just wishful thinking?
 
The uncomfortable truth is that digital identity ownership is fragmented. Individuals control intent, platforms control infrastructure, and third parties extract value. Until regulation meaningfully aligns with technical reality, “ownership” will remain more of a philosophical claim than a practical one.
 

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