In digital space, users are increasingly being shaped as commodities by various sites and services.LAST week, social photo-sharing application Instagram caused an uproar when it announced changes to its terms and conditions.
The  changes were related to its advertising policy, and were interpreted by  many people as the company reserving the right to share user  information and pictures with advertisers (or to be used in advertising)  without permission.
Instagram has since reversed that policy and  apologised for the “confusing” language, stating: “Legal documents are  easy to misinterpret.” (You can read its response at  http://bit.ly/U79Nld.)
This seems to have pacified some users,  but many are still fuming, while others have opted to try different  photo-sharing apps as an alternative.
There are two primary  issues with this. One is a privacy issue, in that the company would even  consider sharing user information and pictures with its parent company  Facebook and other third-party organisations (including advertisers).
The  other is copyright; in the same response, Instagram co-founder Kevin  Systrom wrote: “Instagram users own their content and Instagram does not  claim any ownership rights over your photos. Nothing about this has  changed.”
Users had every right to be upset. These are serious  issues with severe repercussions, and it is becoming more and more  common that online sites and applications are usurping the rights and  control of their users. Facebook’s constant changing of privacy settings  is legendary. The deeper we embed ourselves within such social network  sites, the more we seem to get walled in.
As the days wear on, we  find it increasingly harder to escape – most of our connections are in  our social network of choice, our memories are stored within our  profiles, and we are relying on it to be our source of information.
In  many cases, we have come to depend on it for almost all of our  interactions – we no longer need to remember people’s birthdays, we can  send messages to each other conveniently without the need to store  addresses, and we can broadcast our lives to all our friends at the  click of a mouse.
Whether or not the reliance on such technology  is a good thing is a different debate, but the fact is that the services  these sites provide – it doesn’t matter if we never needed them before –  are extremely useful.
However, many users don’t realise that  this is still a service. Such technology has become so embedded in our  lives that many of us have taken it for granted.
The fact that it  is also primarily operated on the Internet has contributed to this  sense of entitlement. Why buy newspapers when you get the news online  for free? How many of us still send text messages via SMS now that there  is iMessage, Blackberry Messenger and WhatsApp? With Skype and Viber,  who needs to make traditional phone calls?
In some cases, it is  easy to see how the companies behind them are making money. Newspapers  now provide news for free (some have paywalls) with the hope of driving  more traffic to their sites, which are plastered with advertising.
Apple  and RIM, the maker of the Blackberry, promote their messaging systems  to encourage people to buy their devices. Skype has a premium service  that users can pay for as well as cheaper computer-to-phone rates which  helps supplement its income. In that sense, the products these companies  offer are obvious.
Social network sites like Facebook, Instagram and Twitter also have a product: You and me.
What  they essentially do is no different from the media outlets – they sell  their user base to advertisers. Unlike the print and broadcast media,  however, these sites tend to have more information on their users which  can be sorted or mined to help advertisers reach their target market.
Each  update we post on these sites contains more information about our lives  and what interests us – whether it’s in the words we use, the places we  check in from or the photos we upload. And they have a lot of  information. Citing European policy law, a student from the University  of Vienna made a request to Facebook to hand over all the information it  had on him. And Facebook provided it – all 1,200 pages of it.
The  point here isn’t about how scary it is that a company has so much  information on each of us – this too is a different debate.
The  concern is that as technology advances, we are increasingly being shaped  to be a product, and this is an awareness we have to carry with us  constantly. It is pertinent to note that this is not a new phenomenon –  the whole basis of the advertising industry is based on consumers being  the product.
This is why newspapers are able to subsidise  publishing costs to sell their products at a relatively low price (or in  some cases, offer it for free) and why we get to watch television for  “free”. Or pay very little.
We need this awareness because it  will help us make decisions about how we navigate our digital lives. It  will also help us reclaim some of the control – and our rights.
Instagram  may have reversed that new policy for now, but there’s no saying it  won’t come back in another form. Facebook has gotten away for many years  with changes that its users do not like because few people are willing  to walk away from it.
This is not to suggest that what these  companies are doing is right. But the adage that nothing is free rings  true in this situation. There are alternatives but each comes with a  price.
The alternatives to these sites – some of which are on  open-source platforms – may not be as polished and lack the critical  mass to be as effective as the big social sites. Then there are the  commercial entities which charge you (Flickr, for example, is  capitalising on a sudden exodus from Instagram to its platform, offering  its paying customers an additional three months of service).
It  is only by carrying this awareness with us always that we can truly make  the right decision – whether to stick with these companies, or stick it  to them.
ReWired By Niki Cheong
 Niki has just completed his MA Digital Culture and Society at King’s College London. Connect with him at http://blog.nikicheong.com or  on Twitter via @nikicheong. Suggest topics and issues on digital  culture, or pose questions, via email or on Twitter using the  #Star2reWired hashtag.