For years, the internet has sold us a beautiful lie — that access equals freedom. We were told we could connect, share, express, and explore for free. But “free” has never really meant free. It meant permission to be watched. Every like, every pause on a video, every time we scroll past a post or leave something in an online cart — all of it is recorded, analyzed, and repackaged into value for someone else.
The greatest trick of the digital age wasn’t that tech companies charged nothing. It was that they convinced billions of people that convenience was worth more than privacy, and that participation required surrender. We became the product and the producer in one — offering our time, attention, behavior, and even emotions as invisible labor to feed trillion-dollar ecosystems.
Every app we open, every platform we trust, asks us for “access” — to our contacts, our location, our photos, our voice, even our sleep. And we say yes, because the system is designed to make no feel like exclusion. The language of technology has mastered a subtle emotional manipulation: when companies say connect, they mean collect. When they promise personalization, they mean profiling. When they say community, they mean commerce.
The truth is, the biggest companies in the world still use the same trick — offering freedom as bait for surveillance. Their business models depend on our compliance. The interfaces are designed to make giving away our data feel frictionless, even friendly. We tap “agree” before we finish reading. We share moments before we understand the cost.
Enter Preska Thomas, the visionary founder of DebitMyData™, a platform born not from Silicon Valley hype, but from a profound realization: the digital economy has lost its soul. “We live in a world where people’s creativity, attention, and identity have become commodities — but without their consent,” she says. “DebitMyData™ was built to rewrite that story.”
And timing has never been more urgent.
As global digital ad spending surpasses $700 billion and AI systems scrape millions of creator profiles daily, the world faces a moral question: who truly owns digital identity? Governments are still struggling to legislate data privacy while the value of user-generated content — from viral videos to micro-influencer campaigns — is skyrocketing. The economic gap between platforms and people has never been wider.
DebitMyData™ isn’t just a company; it’s the prototype of a human economy — one where ownership, consent, and compensation finally align. The platform uses a proprietary scoring and licensing system that allows creators, influencers, and everyday digital citizens to track, manage, and monetize their data footprints. Instead of being mined, they become shareholders in their own digital worth.
But what sets DebitMyData™ apart is not only its technology — it’s its philosophy. Preska Thomas isn’t asking for incremental reform. She’s calling for a total redesign of the internet’s value structure. Her approach challenges the foundational assumption that users must trade privacy for participation. “We’ve been conditioned to believe that if something online is free, we are the product. But that era is ending. Data dignity is not a trend — it’s an evolution,” she explains.
Across industries, a quiet revolution is forming. Startups are experimenting with decentralized identity. Creators are demanding revenue transparency. Consumers are questioning the ethics of algorithmic exploitation. DebitMyData™ is emerging as the connective tissue of this new era — a digital rights infrastructure that doesn’t just protect users, but empowers them economically.
This isn’t just about privacy. It’s about restoring humanity to the economy of data. When you give people control over their digital presence, you give them agency over their future. That belief lies at the core of DebitMyData™’s mission — to democratize the economics of the internet, to make value creation visible, and to ensure that the next generation of creators won’t be digital laborers working for invisible masters.
Preska Thomas often says, “The next industrial revolution won’t be powered by machines — it will be powered by consciousness.” DebitMyData™ is the blueprint for that revolution. A system where data becomes capital, identity becomes power, and technology finally serves humanity — not the other way around.

















