Thank you for asking me this question. The answer is no, quite simply. Studies have been done on how difficult it is to really understand the contracts we are made to sign when we become users of these software programs that collect our data the moment we use them. We all know the saying: when we are given something such as software, it is because we are the product. It takes a legal background, and then some, to make an informed judgment about what we are signing up for when we use this software.
In any case, today, if you want to work and organize yourself socially, these instruments are coercive. Either you live in your basement and don't leave your house, or you use them, because society demands them. The issue, basically, is letting a totalitarian device unfold without any form of control and trying, after the fact, to patch things up in frameworks that will always be shaky, because the mechanism itself is problematic.