The cookie that I got for filling out the annual survey was that I got a badge to go along with it.
If I'm not getting the cookie, why am I willingly giving you my participation?
Why should I rejoice for you taking away my hard-earned cookie, given that I gave you my time on the condition that I'd get it?
When we reviewed the process for this coming year’s survey, it was determined that assigning the Census badge added an unnecessary element of privacy risk. Although we understand this may be disappointing for those who spent time completing the survey to earn this badge, your privacy is of the utmost importance.
I'm guessing that this is the NSA knows you were at a bridge and knows who you were calling and for how long, but not the contents of it level of metadata concern we're guarding against?
That's...odd. There's nothing really in the survey that anyone could use to build a case against anyone. Like...I don't get it at all. Sure, there are questions about one's self-identity, but...so what?
This decision makes no sense, I disagree with it, and I do wish the company hadn't reverted its long-standing convention of not deleting badges versus retiring them.
In response to the latest update, in which there is a return of the badge:
I'm glad that the badge is coming back, but the thing is that I gave you this data on multiple different occasions, and I'm only getting one badge for it. The fact that there's a security issue in which I could be identified for my responses is...well, bluntly, not my fault; I trusted Stack Overflow to be good data stewards and they let me down, and now I have to lose the additional badges that I received for it.
I mean sure, this pacifies whatever security concern y'all surfaced (it's not like this wasn't already talked about well in advance of this rolling out, and it's not like doing this now isn't going to prevent bad actors from finding things out), but since I've received the only cookie you're going to give me, I'm simply not going to partake in the survey. If the company is willing to alter the deal they make with us and then just...not be forthcoming over the fact that they really dropped the ball on keeping this kind of data as secure as they could, then there's a lot less incentive to trust you with this data or provide it going forward.