It is not about the values. people do value privacy, but there is asymmetrical information between service providers and customers. As such, the price goes down to zero and the product quality reflects it.
Economist George Akerlof pointed this out in his 1970 paper "The Market for Lemons: Quality Uncertainty and the Market Mechanism.". The way society fixed it with cars, was to introduce Lemon laws. If they hadn't introduced those laws, people would likely sit here and argue that nobody values what material the car chassis is made of, or if gas fumes leaked into the compartment. Nobody would value safety people would say, as everyone would rather buy the cheap car over the expensive (and more secure) ones.
Economist George Akerlof pointed this out in his 1970 paper "The Market for Lemons: Quality Uncertainty and the Market Mechanism.". The way society fixed it with cars, was to introduce Lemon laws. If they hadn't introduced those laws, people would likely sit here and argue that nobody values what material the car chassis is made of, or if gas fumes leaked into the compartment. Nobody would value safety people would say, as everyone would rather buy the cheap car over the expensive (and more secure) ones.