Microsoft is working on a research project which could give customers vast control over their personal online data.
Microsoft
has been quietly testing the idea and even launched a beta website,
according to reports. It comes at a time when privacy is high on the
agenda following a series of scandals, including Facebook’s Cambridge
Analytica data breach last year.
Reporters first got wind of the project from a tweet. Twitter user “Longhorn” said on Wednesday
: “Microsoft Bali is a project that can delete all your connection and
account information (inverseprivacyproject). It’s currently in private
beta still.”
ZDNet journalist Mary Jo Foley
then found what looked like the Bali website. The site reportedly
required a code to sign in, but visitors could request a code. PC Magazine also appears to have visited the site, but when Business Insider followed the link, the website failed to load.
Foley reported that Bali’s “about” page
described itself as a “new personal data bank which puts users in
control of all data collected about them… The bank will enable users
to store all data (raw and inferred) generated by them. It will allow
the user to visualize, manage, control, share and monetize the data.”
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