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@Dinkenfunkle@mastodon.au cover

Dinkenfunkle

@[email protected]

Just trying to get by.

Retired OWSM. Tired of all the hyper-partisan BS that makes politics into a pointless team sport.

Living on a decrepit old boat. Possibly more decrepit than I am. Unlikely, but possible.

25+ year history of major depression, referred to as "my Black Dog" (acknowledgement to Samuel Johnson and Winston Churchill)

(Header pic shows a two-masted sailing boat at anchor in calm water, taken from a river bank. The far shore can be seen a few hundred metres beyond the boat.)

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admin , to psychology
@admin@mastodon.clinicians-exchange.org avatar

TITLE: Polite Example Letter to a Health-Related Website Endangering Your Privacy

THIS is the letter I wish more people would send to health-related websites and merchants when they observe a privacy problem!

fullscript.com is a service that dispenses non-pharma products to patients (like medical grade supplements) based upon doctor's orders. You have to be referred by a physician to get a patient account. They even have a way of integrating with EHR systems.

They need to get security right.

To: Fullscript Support <[email protected]>

Dear Fullscript Team:

I have always appreciated being able to order from your excellent website.

Your service strives to supply patients with supplements and medicines ordered by doctors. As such, what is ordered can give insight into medical conditions that patients may have.

You may or may not be covered by HIPAA regulations, but I'm sure you will agree that ethically and as a matter of good business practice, Fullscript would want to maintain medical privacy of patients given that medical practices trust you.

This is why I'm concerned with the HIGH level of 3rd party tracking going on throughout your product catalogue. On your login page, the Firefox web browser displays a "gate" icon to let me know that information (I believe my email address) is being shared with Facebook. This is also the case with your order checkout page (see attached screenshot showing Facebook "gate" icon, as well as Privacy Badger and Ghostery plug-in icons in upper right-hand corner blocking multiple outbound data connections).

Privacy Badger is a web browser plugin that detects and warns of or stops (depending upon severity) outbound information from my web browser to 3rd party URLs. Directly below is Privacy Badger's report from your checkout page:

~~~~  
Privacy Badger (privacybadger.org) is a browser extension that automatically learns to block invisible trackers. Privacy Badger is made by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a nonprofit that fights for your rights online.

Privacy Badger blocked 23 potential trackers on us.fullscript.com:

insight.adsrvr.org  
js.adsrvr.org  
bat.bing.com  
static.cloudflareinsights.com  
script.crazyegg.com  
12179857.fls.doubleclick.net  
12322157.fls.doubleclick.net  
googleads.g.doubleclick.net  
connect.facebook.net  
www.google-analytics.com  
analytics.google.com  
www.google.com  
www.googletagmanager.com  
fonts.gstatic.com  
ad.ipredictive.com  
trc.lhmos.com  
snap.licdn.com  
o927579.ingest.sentry.io  
js.stripe.com  
m.stripe.network  
m.stripe.com  
q.stripe.com  
r.stripe.com  
~~~

Please note that I was able to successfully checkout WITH Privacy Badger blocking protections on, so most of this outbound information was NOT necessary to the operation of your website.

There are several advertising networks and 3rd party data brokers receiving some kind of information.

I am aware that a limited amount of data sharing can be necessary to the operation of a website (sometimes). I am also aware that this all is not malicious -- web development and marketing does not usually talk to the legal department before deploying tools useful to gathering site usage statistics (Crazy Egg and Google Analytics). However, these conversations need to happen.

As for "de-identified" or "anonymized" data -- data brokers collect information across several websites, and so are able to reconstruct patient identities even if you don't transmit what would obviously be PHI (protected health information). As an example, if Google sees the same cookie or pixel tracking across multiple websites and just one of them sends a name, then Google knows my name. If Facebook is sent my email address (as looks to be the case), and I happen to have a Facebook account under that same email address, then Facebook knows who I am -- and can potentially link my purchases with my profile.

The sorts of computing device data that you are collecting and forwarding here may well qualify as PHI. Please see:

Use of Online Tracking Technologies by HIPAA Covered Entities and Business Associates  
<https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/privacy/guidance/hipaa-online-tracking/index.html>

This HHS and OCR guidance includes many 3rd party tracking technologies.

What I would really like to see happen is:

a) A thorough look at what information your website is sending out to what 3rd parties, along with an understanding of how data brokers can combine information tidbits from multiple websites to build profiles.

b) Use of alternative marketing analysis tools that help your business. For example, there are alternatives to Google Analytics that do not share all that data with Google and still give your marketing team the data they need.

c) An examination if you are sharing information about what products patients are clicking on and/or purchasing with 3rd parties. This would be especially problematic. (Crazy Egg tracks client progress through a website, but I'm unclear if they keep the information or just leave it with you.)

d) Use of alternative code libraries that are in-house. For example, web developers frequently utilize fonts.gstatic.com, but you could likely get fonts and other code sets elsewhere or store them in-house.

I appreciate you taking time to read this and working on the privacy concerns of your patients and affiliated medical practices.

Thanks.

~~~~~~  
#AI #CollaborativeHumanAISystems #HumanAwareAI #artificialintelligence #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy #EHR #medicalnotes #progressnotes @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @socialwork @[email protected] #mentalhealth #technology #psychiatry #healthcare #patientportal #HIPAA #dataprotection #infosec @[email protected] #doctors #hospitals #BAA #businessassociateagreement #coveredentities #privacy #HHS #OCR #fullscript
Dinkenfunkle ,

@admin @psychotherapist @psychotherapists @psychology @socialpsych @psychiatry @infosec

My question is "how could it not be worth it?" Which obviously you don't have to answer to me.

Is there a down-side?

Apart from quite possibly wasting your time, I mean. So then it might be an ethical issue ... do I not assist in de-shittification of the internet-cyber-webs becasue it might waste my time? Well, do I?

I hope you report it, but that's just me.

(easy for me to have an opinion, I'm in a different country. 😀 )

jeffgreene , to psychology
@jeffgreene@mastodon.social avatar

Does effective self-regulation promote future effective self-regulation, leading to a virtuous cycle? This conceptual replication study indicates yes! Check out my Substack to learn more!


@edutooters @psychology

https://open.substack.com/pub/bemusings/p/virtuous-and-vicious-cycles-of-self?r=dvmo5&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web

Dinkenfunkle ,

@jeffgreene @psychology

You know, I thought that shampoo ad was going to demonstrate that "rinse and repeat" was just an effective marketing ploy. 😀

From the other side of the couch, so to speak, the results relating to procrastination are of some interest. With 25-ish years of experience, I can confidently say that the onset of wide-spread procrastination is a correlate (with the usual distinction from causation) to an onset of a depressive episode. Similarly qualified, a reduction in procrastination almost invariably heralds an abatement of such episodes.

Thanks for pointing out the paper.

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