Two ways to protect your privacy
Cash + Electronic Health Records.
Disclaimer
I personally do not advocate any process or procedure contained in any of my 100% human publications. Information presented is not intended to provide legal, lawful, financial or medical advice, diagnosis, treatment, cure, nor prevent any disease. Views expressed are for educational purposes only. I surround, protect, purify and make harmless the following information.
Watch and share this brief video [text below]
Thanks to Jane Scharf, Paralegal.
https://docs.google.com/videos/d/1KERIvMxV9C3N20L8BWwvdtBQVh_84Wadn0b17KuhB1A/edit?usp=drive_link
• Everyday actions each of us can take.
• No special knowledge required.
• Legal, peaceful, and effective.
Why This Matters
• Digital identity systems rely on data integration.
• Financial activity + personal records + services.
• Everyday behaviour creates permanent data trails.
Action 1: Use Cash
• Cash transactions create no centralized behavioural record.
• They reduce tracking and automated profiling.
• They help preserve ordinary privacy.
How Cash Helps
• • No automatic data aggregation
• • No remote freezing or restrictions
• • Less behavioural surveillance
• • Maintains personal autonomy
Simple Ways to Start Using Cash
• • Groceries and local shopping
• • Small purchases
• • Community markets
• • Everyday services
Action 2: Protect Your Files [Electronic Health Records]
• You have the right to restrict sharing of personal health information.
• This is called a Consent Directive in Ontario.
What a Consent Directive Does
• Limits access to your electronic health records
• Prevents automatic system-wide sharing
• Requires authorization before access
How to Submit a Consent Directive
• Visit the Ontario Health Consent Directive form:
https://consentform.ontariohealth.ca
• Follow the instructions to submit your request.
Electronic Health Records [EHR]
A consent directive in Ontario gives patients or their substitute decision makers - the option to restrict access to personal health information in the EHR. If you - or your substitute decision maker - do not want to share health information with members of your health care team, you can restrict access by requesting a consent directive be added to your EHR. If a consent directive is in place and a clinician tries to access your record, a notification that your record is blocked will appear.
Perhaps check your province and/or state for similar protection.
Why Individual Action Works
• Large systems depend on mass participation.
• Small actions repeated by many people change outcomes.
• Privacy grows when people actively exercise their rights.
Take Action Today
• Use cash whenever possible.
• Submit a consent directive.
• Share this information with others.
Personal responsibility
Artificial intelligence thrives on data. The less data humans feed artificial intelligence the less power it has over human lives.
Without prejudice and without recourse
Doreen Agostino
Our Greater Destiny Blog
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