Liquid Avatar (LQID:CSE - Formerly KABN) Digital ID and Monetization Model Validated By Google Major Announcement Shifting Away From Ad Target

AGORACOM Small Cap CEO Interviews - Een podcast door AGORACOM

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When the Facebook  data privacy scandal broke out, the world woke up to just how badly our  individual data was being traded, used and most importantly, the amount  of profit being generated by major corporations at our expense. This led to the enactment of the biggest data privacy laws in history.   Specifically, General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) out of Europe  and the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA). Enter LQID  (formerly KABN).  The Company Turns The Problem Of Data Privacy Into A  Profit For Individuals, While Providing Big Businesses With New &  Compliant Business Models. More than just lip service, LQID has  made some major announcements, including joining the Trust Over IP  Foundation, which includes over 170 members including IBM, Mastercard,  Accenture and many other global leaders who are defining a complete  architecture for Internet-scale digital trust. Does that sound  like a mouthful?  Yeah, it does.  But all you have to really understand  for now is that digital ID, privacy and monetization is going to become a  reality in the very near future.  Government regulations are enforcing  it.  Consumers are demanding it and LQID is delivering it at such an  advanced scale that the Trust Over IP Foundation provided them with a  strategic role as a Steering Member. GOOGLE ANNOUNCEMENT MARKS ENORMOUS SHIFT IN ONLINE TARGETING THAT VALIDATES LIQUID AVATAR BUSINESS MODEL We've been  pounding the table since the summer of 2020 that LQID was way ahead of  anybody in the small cap space.  In fact, so early they may have  actually been too early to the game.  We were right on the former ...  but Google proved us way wrong on the latter when this story broke last  week, with the subsequent quotes from Business Insider to back it up: Google announces major shift away from precision-targeting of ads based on everything you do on the internet Google  believes these types of tracking methods don't "meet rising consumer  expectations for privacy, nor will they stand up to rapidly evolving  regulatory restrictions, and therefore aren't a sustainable long term  investment." Google  is experimenting with tools in its Privacy Sandbox that are designed to  allow advertising to continue to work on the web but in a less  privacy-encroaching way. "Keeping  the internet open and accessible for everyone requires all of us to do  more to protect privacy — and that means an end to not only third-party  cookies, but also any technology used for tracking individual people as  they browse the web," David Temkin, Google's director of product  management for ads privacy and trust, What is the potential outcome of this major shift by Google? Google's decision could upend the ad industry, which has relied on these types of tracking tools You would think  LQID CEO David Lucatch wrote the announcement and the bullet points  himself.  Turns out he didn't need to because he was already ahead of  Google. Now the data  privacy and monetization game is underway with LQID sitting in a great  position within the industry and the dominant position within the small  cap world. Watch this interview with CEO David Lucatch and welcome to the next potential great disruptive industry of the decade.

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