HDAP: Human Data Access Payment argues that private information carries measurable value and that organizations should no longer receive that value for free. Every day, consumers are asked for names, phone numbers, email addresses, home addresses, Social Security numbers, payment information, purchase behavior, work history, credit files, and other forms of personal data. Businesses and institutions collect that information before making decisions, setting prices, extending credit, screening applicants, tracking loyalty, building profiles, and reducing their own risk.
The benefit begins the moment access begins. Jawanna Dean names that reality clearly and offers a remedy. Human Data Access Payment, or HDAP, is a consumer protection doctrine based on one rule: any organization that requests, receives, reviews, stores, uses, shares, scores, prices, tracks, or profits from personal information must pay the human source for access. This book shows how unpaid data extraction operates across modern life.
It examines unequal commerce, bait-and-switch pricing, retail loyalty systems, store credit, prepaid customer value, demographic sorting, public records, rejection and delay, predatory credit practices, and the broader use of human information as raw commercial material. It also argues for stronger boundaries around data retention, disclosure, sharing, and institutional accountability. At the center of the book is a practical correction.
If access creates value, payment should begin there. If a person is denied after providing information, that denial should still carry accountability. If customer behavior helps a store understand demand, the customer should receive value in return. If a lender uses a file to price or burden a person, that access should be visible, compensated, and limited. The book concludes with The Human Data Access Payment Act, a legislative proposal that turns the doctrine into a formal policy framework.
HDAP is a sharp, original argument for economic dignity in the age of constant data collection. It insists on a basic truth too often ignored: the human being behind the record is the source of the value.
HDAP: Human Data Access Payment argues that private information carries measurable value and that organizations should no longer receive that value for free. Every day, consumers are asked for names, phone numbers, email addresses, home addresses, Social Security numbers, payment information, purchase behavior, work history, credit files, and other forms of personal data. Businesses and institutions collect that information before making decisions, setting prices, extending credit, screening applicants, tracking loyalty, building profiles, and reducing their own risk.
The benefit begins the moment access begins. Jawanna Dean names that reality clearly and offers a remedy. Human Data Access Payment, or HDAP, is a consumer protection doctrine based on one rule: any organization that requests, receives, reviews, stores, uses, shares, scores, prices, tracks, or profits from personal information must pay the human source for access. This book shows how unpaid data extraction operates across modern life.
It examines unequal commerce, bait-and-switch pricing, retail loyalty systems, store credit, prepaid customer value, demographic sorting, public records, rejection and delay, predatory credit practices, and the broader use of human information as raw commercial material. It also argues for stronger boundaries around data retention, disclosure, sharing, and institutional accountability. At the center of the book is a practical correction.
If access creates value, payment should begin there. If a person is denied after providing information, that denial should still carry accountability. If customer behavior helps a store understand demand, the customer should receive value in return. If a lender uses a file to price or burden a person, that access should be visible, compensated, and limited. The book concludes with The Human Data Access Payment Act, a legislative proposal that turns the doctrine into a formal policy framework.
HDAP is a sharp, original argument for economic dignity in the age of constant data collection. It insists on a basic truth too often ignored: the human being behind the record is the source of the value.