This happened to a lot of people a couple of years ago, to the point where Amazon was "looking into it". I hope at least it was an insane maniacal laugh.
I've always been the technology freak in my family, but the last ten years or so, ever since the first iPhone, the tech has gone from "enthusiast" to "everyone". I have a computer and an iPad with the wifi turned off that I use as a reader, but my non-techie brother and his family are wired 24/7. They're on facebook all the time, they have laptops, iPads, smartphones, an Alexa, a smart TV, smart watches, a smart thermostat and a friggin' weather station, all online. There's not a second of their life that's not measured and logged to remote servers in some way, and it doesn't bother them at all because they don't see the downsides unless it impacts them directly.
When something bad does happen, like the Equifax breach, they moan about it over dinner and on facebook for a couple of days and then forget all about it and go back to business as usual. They'll nod their heads when I rant about security, but they just don't care enough to do anything about it. To them it's 99% upside and 1% downside, and they can live with that, and I think that's how the majority of people see it. It's just the new normal.
For teenagers it's not even the
new normal, it's just the normal. They've never known anything else. To them there's never been a time when pocket computers with touch screens, voice assistants and always online didn't exist.
"I only read American. I want my fantasy pure." - Dave