Thank you, Mr. Angus, for visiting the website.
I encourage relationship building with those who come to the website. I encourage feedback. As a politician I gather data from that website to be responsibly used. I use Google perhaps as many as 50 times a day. As Mr. Erskine-Smith said, DuckDuckGo and Mozilla Firefox are good, but Google is much better for my applications.
I was struck—and I'm assuming that you were, too, and I'd like your comments—when Facebook's Mr. Zuckerberg appeared before the congressional committee and he would not address the question of who owns the browsing history of those who use his platforms. I'm just wondering. In light of the fact that the Cambridge Analytica-Facebook-AggregateIQ scandal is based on the fact that improperly harvested data, including the vulnerabilities or the very personal aspects of users' browsing history, among other things, came together for this phenomenon that we've come to know as “psychographic microtargeting” and attempts to influence electoral processes.
I'm just wondering if I could have final comments from you, Professor, and then Ms. Wylie, on who owns my data.