Approach a condition from the position of «Tell me what's bothering you» rather than «Tell me what you have,» Bertolini said, and you might convince a patient to
hand over personal data in pursuit of a solution to what ultimately irks them.
Not exact matches
The haters» beef: Facebook now stores the
personal data of
over half a billion people — all within the
hands of a 26 - year - old college dropout with no adult supervision.
If the skeptics are right, Wood writes, Common Core «will damage the quality of K — 12 education for many students; strip parents and local communities of meaningful influence
over school curricula; centralize a great deal of power in the
hands of federal bureaucrats and private interests; push for the aggregation and use of large amounts of
personal data on students without the consent of parents; usher in an era of even more abundant and more intrusive standardized testing; and absorb enormous sums of public funding that could be spent to better effect on other aspects of education.»
When looked at in this light, a lot of the behaviors make perfect sense including those of Real Climate (stifling of disagreement as disagreement is experienced as criticism and criticism is experienced as a
personal attack), those of reactions to any «skeptical» papers and the journals that publish them, their avoidance of
handing over data and correspondence, etc..
For instance, IRS officials recently demanded that Coinbase (a major Bitcoin exchange)
hand over its customers»
personal data.
After all, the
personal data collected by Facebook (which is another issue all by itself) on millions of users —
data that contains enough
personal details to create a startlingly accurate psychological profile — was simply
handed over to someone because he claimed it was for academic research.
This is advantageous for both sides of the transaction, as customers won't have to
hand over sensitive
personal information and merchants won't have to integrate expensive and complex security systems to safely handle this
data.
The only people who even attempt to argue this point are those willing to
hand over Canadians
personal data for their own gain.