Post
Topic
Board Tokens (Altcoins)
Re: Data is the new DeFi - Tapmydata lets people control, own and license their data
by
Miiike
on 05/12/2020, 21:45:22 UTC

Interesting. I have to admit that I was a bit skeptical about your platform before, in a sense of bargaining power against similar platform. But it appears you ran on a different field than the other platform I knew.

Say, let's say I have a data on AAA, you gathered all of my info on their database, and your command, delete (as you featured on the opening post), will it only works to (according to your description) erase data that is not mine, like a case of a wrongfully used data (for example someone uses my credential to create a membership), or can I also use them to permanently and completely delete my user info on AAA, for a case where I was their member and no longer wanted to use their service?

Our first product, the Rights Management Platform was developed and launched with this being the core proposition, the first ‘real world’ experiment around data rights with 2 goals:

1: To establish whether people cared about their rights, would want to exercise them and control their data, given tools, and a frictionless user experience.

2: That organizations would be keen to demonstrate their commitment to data rights and best practice when presented with a dedicated channel designed with security and transparency as twin drivers. 

At the core of our rights platform is the Tapmydata app which operates as a directory of organizations, a personal data store, wallet, and secure end-to-end encrypted messaging platform for communicating with organizations and sending files back and forth.

In the back-end of the system is a secure platform for organizations to manage their team and respond to rights requests. Although the platform was built primarily for rights, it is in essence a secure request and response platform with crypto baked in and we recently deployed the product to customers in response to the COVID-19 system for contact tracing.

The Rights Management Platform for organizations is being expanded to support:

1. Data discovery (through our partnership with ESpyder)
2. Data redaction to reduce work-load for organizations returning data

The Rights Management Platform is also a flexible end-to-end encrypted communication channel. Following Covid, we successfully rolled out the platform to support the Church of Scotland with their track and trace requirements. You can see how this works from a consumer perspective in a short video or a demonstration of the organization's side of things.

Dear lord. LOL. I actually am fine with a simple yes and no, alongside with perhaps small explanation, but the full technical is always welcome and much appreciated. Once again, I am impressed.

So, just to be sure, it's a "yes, we can help scrub personal data upon request"?

And, just a little out of topic curiosity, what's the result of the "real world" experiment? Does real world people care about their data rights?