Article Status Notice: This Article is a stub


This article is underdeveloped, and needs additional work to meet the wiki's Content Guidelines and be in line with our Mission Statement for comprehensive coverage of consumer protection issues. Learn more ▼

Forced account registration/sign-in/log-in is a practice committed by entities, where users must have (and use) a digital identity to perform simple tasks that may have otherwise been possible without any sort of identifiers.

Because forced accounts generally means anonymity is technically possible, entities that engage in this practice have little reason to do so outside of personal gain. They may find it favorable for several reasons, including:

  1. Identification and tracking of users - often accomplished through device identifiers, location information, and network connection.[citation needed]
  2. Increased digital integration - more integrating means more sharing data with payment processors, ad providers, and more.[citation needed]
  3. Increased centralization and dependency on big companies - further consolidates power and wealth into large companies, such as the tech companies who own the authentication servers, as well as payment processors. While not all user identification mechanisms need centralization, most corporations tend to prefer centralization.[citation needed]

Examples

  • Samsung and Google both deliberately limit what the user can do on the Galaxy Store and Play Store, respectively. Most features (such as updating and installing apps) are either completely blocked, or hidden from the main UI, nagging the user into signing-in to unlock the "extra" features.[citation needed]

See also