You are just wrong. Some of your data such as health data stays constant throughout your life. Especially for guys living with chronic conditions. Your key identifiers stay the same too. E.g your phone number etc. These are then used to re-establish your advertising identity. This theory that old data declines in value couldn't be more wrong given that the "old" data is never deleted. Just waiting to find its original purpose.
Yes, but the value of the data has declined. If I am a business I would not pay the same amount or more for five-year-old data. Some portion of that dataset will be bad data. Some of the subjects will have had died, for example.
Decline does not mean zero, but the point is older data is less valuable. So, making your data leaking footprint smaller today will still provide you value (not infinite value though) as time goes on.
Sure, the more recent data will always have a higher value if you are looking at massive datasets.
But I think if you look at this problem from an individual perspective. Key data that is unique to them doesn't change most of the time. Say a target person has dental issues and you have their phone number. There is a high chance that in 5 years from now, they still may require dental services and their phone number hasn't changed. They may have moved jobs, neighborhoods etc. in between but their need for dental service has remained constant and probably will into the future.
Let me give you another example. Say you want to run for public office, and in your young adult life some of your social media pages had questionable posts/media. Is this data any less valuable to your competition running for the same office?
I may be taking a different approach with this but a lot of nuances get lost in the numbers.
My point is once the data is out there on the internet, it can be hard to control it and/or assign value to it.
You can change your phone number though. What if you change it so frequently that it's no longer a key identifier? Why not have a system where you can receive phone calls without a phone number? I believe some of the solution here is to stop having globally unique identifiers.
Burner numbers are close, but if you use the same one for all your contacts it still becomes an identifier, even if you rotate it. An alternative is a proxy service where you get issued a unique pin for each person-to-person connection, so the same phone number gets used by multiple parties. Those both use the existing phone network in better ways. With a VoIP system you don't need numbers, you just don't want to trade them for usernames or some other global identifier. I implemented one approach with Severus, but I'm also looking for alternatives that increase privacy.
Cherry picked examples are proof that the OP is wrong, at least to an extent, and that there exists data that doesn't change or changes slow enough to be re-tagged (and this poses the issue in question).
Proof of existence is enough to invalidate a claim of non-existence, even if it doesn't hold for any condition in the world.
No comments were made in the context of logic, so the logical forms don't apply. Personally I'm interested in the long-term value of data and not a logic contest - I'm interested in the territory, not a particular map of it.