Ensure your location data is handled responsibly with PrivacyCheck
Unacast has evolved its PrivacyCheck privacy-enhancing technology (PET) to block more than 500K sensitive locations from both its own location data products and the data of other providers. Now, PrivacyCheck gives every business access to the same best-in-class, privacy-enhancing technology that Unacast built for its own use. Our technology has quickly evolved with legislation over the years and continues to adapt to the latest privacy concerns, making Unacast the most reliable partner in the location data industry.
What are Privacy-Enhancing Technologies?
Privacy-enhancing technologies (PETs) encompass a wide array of solutions aimed at safeguarding privacy and the integrity of data. These technologies empower organizations to harness the commercial, scientific, and social benefits of data, all while upholding strict privacy standards. By employing techniques such as cryptography, anonymization, and obfuscation, PETs ensure the confidentiality of personal data, thus enabling secure data collaboration and analytics. At their core, PETs represent sophisticated digital tools that facilitate the responsible collection, processing, analysis, and dissemination of information, safeguarding data privacy throughout.
Unacast’s PET, PrivacyCheck
Unacast initiated the development of this technology in 2019, with a commitment to ensuring its products avoided using data collected from mobile devices at privacy-sensitive locations. Recognizing the complexities involved in handling location data and the paramount importance of utilizing only data that complies with privacy standards, we aimed to extend our solution to others navigating similar challenges. Consequently, we introduced PrivacyCheck, an innovative PET designed to identify and eliminate location data originating from sensitive areas, thereby enhancing compliance efforts. This groundbreaking tool represents the first of its kind, offering a robust solution for safeguarding privacy within your systems.
Why is this important?
Location data fuels critical analytics across myriad industries today. It lets companies reach the right audience with their advertising. It helps businesses decide where to open a new store and municipalities figure out how to revitalize their downtowns. It provides insight into roadblocks in the supply chain. It helps researchers learn how a virus like COVID-19 spreads in our communities. It illuminates evacuation patterns and travel routes so that we can be better prepared when disasters strike – whether it’s the Mosquito Fire in California or Hurricane Ian in Florida. There is no exaggeration in saying location data’s ability to show human movement at scale is helping to solve some very big challenges.
Managing Consumer Data Privacy
But despite the many benefits of location analytics, consumer data privacy remains a concern for many. From the start, Unacast has used an array of techniques to protect the privacy of individuals, like using data in aggregate and with a 24-48 hour delay. Later, our practices evolved with legislation, including the EU’s GDPR and California’s CCPA, by requiring consumer consent for location data to be collected and giving consumers the ability to opt out. This summer, the Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization ushered in a whole new set of privacy concerns. Now, our blocklist of more than 500K sensitive locations is implemented across our portfolio of products, ensuring that data obtained at these locations – including women’s healthcare centers – cannot be used.
As a location data processor, Unacast has taken whatever steps necessary to ensure that location data obtained at sensitive locations isn’t used in its products or sold to a customer. But there hasn’t been a lot of talk about how this data comes into being in the first place. The fact is, more precise location data is being collected in more ways — and by more companies — than ever before. Every mobile app that lets you see local news or sports scores, not to mention order takeout, request a taxi, or make hotel reservations, is collecting location information about its users behind the scenes. Mobile devices, WiFi networks, web browsers, and IoT devices are also collecting location data for an array of purposes.
Location data is a mother lode of customer insights for businesses who, in turn, mine it for decision-making. But regardless of how it’s collected or whether it’s ever shared outside an organization, by capturing consumers’ location data, these businesses become responsible for handling it appropriately.
There is a serious learning curve when it comes to managing data privacy compliance, to say nothing of working with geolocation data in bulk. That’s what is so remarkable about this week’s launch: PrivacyCheck gives every business access to the same best-in-class, privacy-enhancing technology that Unacast built for its own use. Businesses with apps that collect location data are almost certainly in possession of data generated at sensitive locations, whether they realize it or not. This data might be inadvertently sold, used for analysis, accessed by a bad actor, or exposed during a data breach—all institutional risks of handling precise location data. With PrivacyCheck, businesses can pinpoint location signals generated at a sensitive location and swiftly remove them from their databases. An added bonus is that no data is ever shared with Unacast.
A Shared Challenge & Responsibility
Too often, the most critical commentary has come from industry outsiders who have little practical understanding of location data or location analytics. There have been plenty of articles about what could theoretically happen should someone’s sensitive data fall into the hands of a bad actor. Far less attention has been paid to how location data is actually used and to how devastating it would be for businesses, research teams, and our society to no longer have access to it. (Still less attention has been paid to what it means to concentrate it in the hands of a few big tech companies, but that’s a story for another time.)
This isn’t the last time our privacy-protection practices will evolve, whether in response to customer requirements, or new proposed legislation like the American Data Privacy and Protection Act (ADPPA). Location data isn’t going anywhere: as more companies push more of their customer experience online, even more data will be generated. New data sources, too, like autonomous vehicles, are set to trigger an avalanche of precise location data into the ecosystem. That’s why it’s so important for us to share our expertise with everyone else who’s working with location data today. Together, we can ensure that location data is always handled responsibly, while finding the balance between individual privacy and the larger interests of our society.
To learn more about PrivacyCheck, book a meeting with us today.