The hardest thing about maintaining ur online privacy are the people around you.
from OppressedBread@lemmy.ml to privacy@lemmy.ml on 06 May 08:04
https://lemmy.ml/post/46929780

Have you guys also noticed this? I’m not talking about “Oh my family isn’t privacy conscious” I honestly get that for ur average moms and pops, they don’t know any better.

the problem is with how these big tech companies effectively poisoned the everyday Joe to think that handing over ur data like a good boy is the norm and breaking out is “weird” and “too much”, this blame also goes on Hollywood.

Yesterday my friend called me " Mr robot" for just taking my privacy seriously I thought it was funny.

some people also fired their single neuron and told me “People only do this when they have something to hide”

These remarks that I face from time to time really highlights the mentality of the general society where if you break out of the norm, even if it doesn’t harm them, they would find a way to make off handed remarks about it almost like they’re dissatisfied that you’re fighting.

#privacy

threaded - newest

Bullerfar@lemmy.world on 06 May 08:19 next collapse

I agree, there is government policies and social policies, both supports the use of big tech and forces it into your home.

CallMeAl@piefed.zip on 06 May 08:23 next collapse

It’s by design. If 80 to 90% or more of people blindly agree to share their contacts and email then the rest of use are caught up in it every time we communicate with them.

You cannot both participate in mainstream social networks and communications platforms and have any real privacy.

OppressedBread@lemmy.ml on 06 May 08:50 collapse

that’s big issue but I’m referring to is the social stigma that these big tech companies and Hollywood have cultivated.

People automatically think ur too shady or paranoid if you even think about being private

CallMeAl@piefed.zip on 06 May 08:54 next collapse

I’ve heard you can ask those people, “if you have nothing to hide would you be OK with a camera in your shower? Recording you have sex?”

I like the saying that privacy is like cancer. Just because you don’t have it doesn’t mean its not vitally important to solve for society as a whole.

Auli@lemmy.ca on 06 May 13:43 next collapse

And those are stupid arguments.

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 06 May 14:13 collapse

it gets more frustrating when they double down and insist that only criminals have something to hide.

as if the people who own everything and get to make decisions for everybody and decide who is and isn’t a criminal weren’t listed in the epstein files.

FineCoatMummy@sh.itjust.works on 06 May 17:13 collapse

“if you have nothing to hide would you be OK with a camera in your shower?

I like, “OK! Please hand me your phone, unlocked. Let me have it for 24h. I’ll give it back to you tomorrow. I won’t harm it in any way. I will only look.”

Or, “OK! What is your bank account number and password?”

I believe ppl know that everyone has something to hide. It’s just an excuse they use.

Auli@lemmy.ca on 06 May 13:42 collapse

I mean everyone has a threat model. We are online they is giving up some privacy no matter how careful you are online.

Menschlicher_Fehler@feddit.org on 06 May 08:27 next collapse

I knew a guy once who would upload party photos to Facebook and other sites, tagging the people in it. Did that with passed out and way too drunk people too. That was my call to never party with him… and to maybe drink less over all.

OppressedBread@lemmy.ml on 06 May 08:48 collapse

what a mess lmao

RadicalRebel@sh.itjust.works on 06 May 08:40 next collapse

That’s par for the course my friend. But the response to these cliché statements is what can start to change perspectives! I like highlighting how Big Tech knows them better than they know themselves. Then get into how this means big tech has the ability to change how they view a topic based the specific search results. I then zoom out and explain how this happens for every user similar to them, as well as for every other “group” big tech classifies people under.

I often get something like “But what can we even do about it then?” in response, which more often than not, eventually leads to them admitting they’re lazy and things are too convient to switch away from or stop using lol

OppressedBread@lemmy.ml on 06 May 08:46 next collapse

oh trust me I can argue, its always them being lazy and giving up on their rights

brave_lemmywinks@lemmy.world on 06 May 10:50 collapse

I usually point out that they were the ones saying that their phones are listening to them and making changes to their instagram\shopping algorithm.

pulsewidth@lemmy.world on 06 May 09:16 next collapse

Agree. One thing that I’ve noticed is that if it’s about social media I say I “had to delete it for mental health, that shit is so bad for you”, and generally get a much more receptive response than when I explain it’s primarily for privacy and that I don’t trust them with my data.

Though Zuck and others are making it way easier to point out how creepy their platforms are, so that becomes a good entrypoint re: privacy also.

OppressedBread@lemmy.ml on 06 May 09:43 collapse

only if mark would give me the zucc

also yeah they make it so easy to see how predatory they are, people will still pick sides and defend them lmao

pulsewidth@lemmy.world on 06 May 14:15 collapse

The one I’m thinking of specifically recently is the revelation by Indian subcontractors that META was lying about their Rayban smart glasses having private mode that would not recording in private areas you set like bathroom, shower, in bed etc… And in fact it had sent tens of thousands of videos of people nude or fucking to the Indian subcontractors.

METAs response? Fire them, admit nothing. Lol. That’s some grossss shit that even normies want nothing to do with.

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 06 May 14:35 next collapse

METAs response? Fire them, admit nothing. Lol. That’s some grossss shit that even normies want nothing to do with.

but for as long as normies attention spans are directed here. firing them helps diminish the attention and usually works.

OppressedBread@lemmy.ml on 06 May 15:21 collapse

META and “Private” are things that just dont go together in a sentence, same with consent.

RodgeGrabTheCat@sh.itjust.works on 06 May 09:26 next collapse

I don’t talk about privacy with normies. If they bring it up, I’m happy to discuss.

I think privacy is very slowly becoming more mainstream and a large part of that is thanks to google. Installing “ai” on devices, deleting peoples’ accounts, making installing non-play store apps more difficult, will ultimately encourage more people to degoogle their lives.

OppressedBread@lemmy.ml on 06 May 09:46 next collapse

Idk why tf they’re so hell bent on AI, I get that they need a return on their shitty investments but my god the level of detachment from the general public is insane

RodgeGrabTheCat@sh.itjust.works on 06 May 09:56 next collapse

Yeah, I don’t get it either. I read that only 3% of companies using “ai” saw a return on investment. Companies started re-hiring the humans because the “ai” turns out to be shit. We can’t even produce the power to run these models at scale.

ZeDoTelhado@lemmy.world on 06 May 10:17 next collapse

If you happen to want to know more on why, there are 2 podcasts that talk about this on a very regular basis:

  • Deep Questions with Cal Newport - super chill guy that every week has an episode on ai reality check. Usually explains quite at length why something is happening on ai why is factual or not
  • Better offline - Ed can be quite opinionated and sometimes borderline ranty, but he also tends to breakdown stuff like financial numbers on ai investment and why (or why not) you should break those down.
OppressedBread@lemmy.ml on 06 May 10:22 next collapse

thank you for this, I’ll def check it out!

WhiteOakBayou@lemmy.world on 06 May 14:26 collapse

I think thatsa great description of Zitron. His editorial style initially turned me off but he is thorough and shows his sources for the factual sides of his arguments.

novafunc@discuss.tchncs.de on 06 May 12:22 next collapse

Because AIs don’t need salaries, don’t unionize, can work 24/7.

For some tasks, AI has already completely obsoleted humans. An AI can write a shitty PR filled newsletter faster and cheaper than a human. It keeps getting better at certain tasks, like programming.

All AI companies want to be the one that controls the best AI. Because if they do, then other companies will pay them to rent out AIs for cheaper than human labor.

Companies fear falling behind. So they dump loads of money into AI. And currently, investors like hearing about AI. So the more companies say and push AI, it increases investment into the company.

4am@lemmy.zip on 06 May 13:12 collapse

It’s way more insidious. “AI” is very much LLMs, or Large language Models. The one thing they excel at is ingesting large amounts of text and summarizing, or looking for key points, as directed, and sometimes with non-exact directions.

Large amounts of text, like your browsing history, your personal cloud-stored files, your chats and messages your email. Your taxes. Your bank records. Your not-yet filed patents. Your medical research. Your political donations. Your protest plans. Your sources for the journalism you are doing.

At scale, society-wide. Zoom back and predict the markets overall sentiment. Zoom in down to a single “undesirable”.

All that “it’ll do human creative jobs you have to pay so much for, and if you reduce headcount you’ll get a nice bonus” is for all the short-thinking middle management and vapid C-levels to get suckered by the Mechanical Turk show into think they’ll get a bonus this quarter by putting all their sensitive information on someone else’s computer.

And once their IT staff is minimized and hardware is out of reach, you have achieved vendor lock-in.

And it’s absolutely incredible how literally everyone seems to have fallen for this shiny turd.

I mean cmon, “Palantir”? They were literally created for this purpose.

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 06 May 14:38 collapse

thay have already made the investment and they desperately want the return

fubbernuckin@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 06 May 16:31 collapse

It’s just strange that instead of pushing for return they are pushing for more investment instead

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 06 May 17:30 collapse

they are. they need people to be as dependent on it as possible so they can then push for ransom.

even then, no way they can get their trillion dollar investment back like this, they are probably just trying to push the pop further as long as they possibly can while maneuvering to be on top when it all comes down.

blazeknave@lemmy.world on 06 May 17:05 next collapse

It’s interesting working in the field as a non technical. We talk all day about data security but my homelab has more observability than half the enterprises I speak with. And they all know. And they never have the budget.

It’s literally the first scene of fight club all day erryday in infosec. If the cost of the recall is less than the prevention, not worth it to them.

Anarki_@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 07 May 10:23 collapse

Yeah. no. “Normies” love AI everything. They definitely don’t install apps from outside the Play store either.

Only thing that bugs them from this list is the deletion of accounts. Unfortunately they’ll happily hand over ID and other things to get it back, or just create a new account on the same site.

Source: Experience.

TheGreenWizard@lemmy.zip on 06 May 10:54 next collapse

Its wild, I remember when my first paycheck came in and a family member posted a picture of it to their social media… with my name and all on there.

TheGreenWizard@lemmy.zip on 06 May 11:01 collapse

It also doesn’t stop with privacy, I remember expressing my distaste for generative LLMs to the same person, and the first thing the next day they post in our discord is some shitty ai meme of me and asked if I liked it? All I said was “ah, I tell you I don’t like LLM art and you upload my face to their database, pretty thoughtless of you.” The comment went right through one ear out the other.

jaypatelani@lemmy.ml on 06 May 11:17 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/9f8e724b-3607-4bec-954f-c158f6c25e4e.webp">

MasterBlaster@lemmy.world on 06 May 14:00 next collapse

Ayep. Probably including where you live and what you do for a living.

OppressedBread@lemmy.ml on 06 May 15:17 next collapse
nixukty@lemmy.zip on 07 May 04:26 collapse

I mean it’s still probably beneficial for a lot of cases. Ad and tracking companies want the easiest route, which is just to farm the people who make no effort to improve their privacy (the majority). Sophisticated trackers do exist, and companies like Meta still do literally everything to get any last bit, but for the most part you’ll knock out 90% of invasion with even basic measures and like 98% with greater measures

FreddiesLantern@leminal.space on 06 May 11:29 next collapse

I always gotta love the “why do you refuse the cookies? The site might not work!”.

Sweety I need you to understand that I do not care whether or not the site works. If it doesn’t then it’s not worth my time.

OppressedBread@lemmy.ml on 06 May 15:18 next collapse

guhhh but I love cookies!

MrKoyun@lemmy.world on 06 May 19:30 next collapse

Also I’ve hardly ever seen a site not work because I rejected the cookies.

FreddiesLantern@leminal.space on 06 May 20:01 collapse

Well there’s nonsense like the guardian (I think?) =>Accept our cookies or they become a paywall. But in general I think it’s a sentiment people have that comes from not understanding what cookies are.

akwd169@sh.itjust.works on 06 May 21:59 collapse

Not a thing with the guardian

FreddiesLantern@leminal.space on 07 May 03:12 collapse

<img alt="" src="https://leminal.space/pictrs/image/8c4db7e4-0288-4e3b-925e-449f94db315d.jpeg">

pineapple@lemmy.ml on 07 May 05:29 next collapse

My ublock origin preferences seam to bypass this.

akwd169@sh.itjust.works on 07 May 12:21 collapse

Oh damn my bad, I read all the time and ive never had this… what browser are you using? Are you in the US?

[deleted] on 07 May 12:25 collapse

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Bilbo@hobbit.world on 06 May 19:55 next collapse

I personally find it easier to use a separate browser for anything I don’t need to be logged in for. It deletes all cookies when closed. No need to trust the untrustworthy.

pineapple@lemmy.ml on 07 May 05:32 collapse

Also “I don’t want to use an adblocker, I find tailored advertising very useful”

Yes I love my brain being hijacked by big tech.

unitedwithme@lemmy.today on 06 May 11:37 next collapse

I think people reject that it’s as bad as they’re told because that don’t like to believe it’s that bad, or that there’s no way companies would do that to them. People don’t accept being told “you’re making a big mistake” and to feel dumb about it.

That’s my take. I had somebody at work ask what I do regarding privacy and I realized I lit up with excitement to share and had to immediately dial it back to not freak them out. I started out small and simple and emailed them since basics after chatting. Said, if they wanted additional info let me know " so that it’s up to them to continue the journey (down the rabbit hole lol).

But just glad to see others gaining the knowledge. My journey wasn’t immediate, it’s gradual, so I have to be mindful of their process too.

Belly_Beanis@hexbear.net on 06 May 11:54 next collapse

Was very cool getting doxed a few weeks ago when somebody thought they should post something about me online since I didn’t have a Facebook/Instagram/twitter to post it myself.

Azzu@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 06 May 12:32 next collapse

Look, you might be saying it’s the fault of people around you, but look at what you’re doing here, you give out your real name without a second thought, Mr. Robot.

;)

OppressedBread@lemmy.ml on 06 May 15:24 collapse

Sometimes I dream of saving the world. Saving everyone from the invisible hand

4am@lemmy.zip on 06 May 13:03 next collapse

The really creepy one is stuff like 23andme where your genealogy obsessed extended family all does it and now they can statistically estimate your genome from your known family history and it’s all in a database for sale and Trump’s DOJ is likely buying

OppressedBread@lemmy.ml on 06 May 15:17 collapse

thank god my family didn’t use those services

monovergent@lemmy.ml on 06 May 17:40 collapse

thank god my family discouraged me from using those services back before I became privacy-conscious

xelar@lemmy.ml on 06 May 13:05 next collapse

You are becoming one of these “privacy weirdos” as some think. Fighting for own privacy and using all means to keep it in tact is a lonely battle. Its tough to find someone irl who share the same values. It looks like everybody just got into the same train and go with the flow. For them you are disruption, something uncommon, strange.

Senseless@feddit.org on 06 May 13:37 collapse

I work in IT and even a coworker called me out for trying to protect my privacy by leaving google services as much as possible and using GrapheneOS, running PiHole with unbound. I don’t know how people can work in that field and still be blind to all the privacy concerns.

xelar@lemmy.ml on 06 May 15:10 next collapse

What weirded me out at first in IT was gazing at all the big tech tools with no remorse. It kinda made me question - with all the telemetry, logging, analyzing data in your own apps nobody ever cares leaving some much own traces at big tech overlords.

FineCoatMummy@sh.itjust.works on 06 May 15:25 collapse

I’ve sseen the same thing. Sadly, for most ppl, convenience beats privacy. If something is 1% more convenient, they will pick it no matter how awful it is.

That’s how big tech enshittifies everything. They bank on 99% of people putting convenience before anything else. Even before the future of their society. Most ppl do not understand how powerful information is.

magnue@lemmy.world on 06 May 13:46 next collapse

Yeah if I talk about how everything is routed through VPN people just assume I’m deep into porn or worse.

OppressedBread@lemmy.ml on 06 May 15:12 next collapse

that’s what km sayinggg

FineCoatMummy@sh.itjust.works on 06 May 15:15 collapse

Well, there’s a new War On VPNs starting (ugh). If the Forces of Enshittification prevail, we could see them banned in more countries. And not just the usual suspects either. The idea is being pushed in several US states, in the UK, and maybe(?) the Aussies? It’s being fought in all those ofc. But I’m afraid the political momentum for bans will build and build.

My hope is, that Canada will be chill and not follow the rest of us off a cliff. Come on, Canada! You’re our best hope!

magnue@lemmy.world on 06 May 15:22 collapse

I don’t see how they ban it though. I could surely just buy a VPS somewhere where it is allowed and then route through a VPN from there?

FineCoatMummy@sh.itjust.works on 06 May 15:58 next collapse

Well they have ways to make it very hard. China, Russia, and some other countries already block VPNs. Sure it’s not 100% ironclad. But it doesn’t have to be. They want to block the big majority. If 1% finds a way around, it was still effective.

There are technical ways, like DPI based blocking of the protocols. There are ways to bypass that, sure, but you lost most ppl already.

Then there are social ways. Make the risk too high if you’re caught. Ppl will be afraid to try.

I do not think the US, EU, Aus are close to that extreme yet. Not tryin to say this is right around the corner. But other countries already have done these things. It is possible we could see those measures in the future.

fubbernuckin@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 06 May 16:27 next collapse

Sure, but the general populace has no idea that that’s possible or how to set anything like that up.

Anivia@feddit.org on 07 May 05:09 collapse

I could surely just buy a VPS somewhere where it is allowed and then route through a VPN from there?

That would also be significantly less private than using a public VPN. This method would only prevent your ISP from seeing what you do, but if someone figures out the public ip of your VPS and connects it to your identity, then you’re just as exposed as when not using a VPN at all. The big advantage of public VPNs is that you share a public IP with dozens or hundreds of other users on the same server.

Using Tor would be the better option for privacy, but comes with its own issues. Also, please don’t abuse the tor network for piracy

MasterBlaster@lemmy.world on 06 May 13:58 next collapse

It is worse than that. They often share your information directly, or initiate services that require your participation, and of course you must prove who you are to do so.

SpookyBogMonster@lemmy.ml on 06 May 13:58 next collapse

For as much as your average American loves big government conspiracies, and harping about other people violating the sanctity of their property, they have absolutely no actual privacy and security sense

pineapplelover@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 06 May 14:32 next collapse

arguing that you don’t care about the right to privacy because you have nothing to hide is no different than saying you don’t care about free speech because you have nothing to say.

- Edward Snowden

pineapple@lemmy.ml on 07 May 05:22 next collapse

But that doesn’t give individuals a reason to take action on there own privacy. At least it should mean others will respect you more for valuing your own privacy.

[deleted] on 07 May 14:51 collapse

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pineapplelover@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 06 May 14:33 next collapse

Honestly, maybe I got some charisma or something because I got my friends to take some first steps by using Brave and Bitwarden. Got a couple of them on Signal as well

faintwhenfree@lemmus.org on 06 May 15:30 collapse

Why brave? Bitwarden is fine? Brave will be just choosing lesser evil. I mean sure it’s progress from chrome, but not by much.

XTL@sopuli.xyz on 07 May 05:19 next collapse

Brave is a series scam company. It’s not a lesser evil.

faintwhenfree@lemmus.org on 07 May 06:48 collapse

So who is more evil according to you, Google or Brave?

pineapplelover@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 May 14:51 collapse

Yeah but out of the box, it comes with good fingerprinting protection and adblocking capabilities so it is the path of least resistance for most people.

Whereas if you tell people to use firefox with a couple more extensions and possibly a fingerprinting script then it has a little higher barrier to entry.

glimse@lemmy.world on 06 May 15:01 next collapse

I thought you were going in a different direction (Even without a Facebook account, Meta has your contact info because they scanned your friend’s phone) but both are true. I’ve had similar conversations about it and privacy is not a value most people think is worth standing for. The convenience always outweighs what, for them, is a non-issue.

CultLeader4Hire@lemmy.world on 06 May 15:32 next collapse

It’s genuinely baffling. My spouse is not a very bright guy and sees zero issue with all of our online erosion of privacy, saying all the age verification stuff going on is completely irrelevant and you can just lie about your age so it will never be a problem in the future either… it drives me crazy how short sighted it is

OppressedBread@lemmy.ml on 06 May 16:05 next collapse

unfortunately not everyone can be saved but we try to educate

lost_faith@lemmy.ca on 06 May 17:08 collapse

I told my partner that when there is nowhere I can go online without an ID is the day the net gets turned off in our house. She agreed, though I think she doesn’t think I’ll go through with it

godsammitdam@lemmy.zip on 06 May 15:55 next collapse

It’s scary to think about how the next generations are essentially being groomed to believe that these invasive applications and surveillance are just normal. But that’s the goal of the big tech oligarchs.

Same reason they try and say it’s only criminals that want to protect their privacy.

OppressedBread@lemmy.ml on 06 May 15:59 collapse

that’s what I’m saying, surveillance is the new normal, its trendy, opposition is being an “Extremist” and “Creepy”

ugo@feddit.it on 06 May 16:11 next collapse

Ask people that tell you that only those with something to hide care about privacy whether they shit with the door open or closed when there are others around.

bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works on 06 May 16:21 next collapse

100%. We are the weirdos. I get made fun of daily for it.

Malyca@lemmy.zip on 06 May 20:07 collapse

We’re not though, that’s why it’s funny

magic_smoke@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 06 May 17:21 next collapse

No the one that pisses me off are the people who understand that computers take effort and the only way to fix that is to have an organization that takes care of that effort for you.

For example to replace discord your only options are: Corporate shit Startups which are a few extra users away from IPO’ing into corporate shit Something open source selfhosted

I get why normal folk don’t wann self host. What I can’t stand is the complaints about using other peoples self hosted servers because you can’t be fucked to remember more than two URLs/passwords as if your browser doesn’t have bookmakers and you don’t have a password manager.

Like fuck sure, its cool you don’t want to do system administration. But the only way an extra site is inconvenient is if you’re incapable of the computer equivalent of wiping your own ass.

These are young anticapitalist, chronically online queers I’m talking about too.

If they’re not willing nobody is and its fucking soul crushing to know.

humanamerican@lemmy.zip on 06 May 20:04 collapse

These are young anticapitalist, chronically online queers I’m talking about too.

Right! They already are familiar with being on the fringes of “normal” society, and have a lot more to gain than a “normie” from protecting their privacy, and yet they just can’t be bothered because “Matrix is too clunky” or “I just really like playing Overwatch”. My eyes can’t roll hard enough.

KingThrillgore@lemmy.ml on 06 May 23:22 next collapse

Why? They have their creature comforts and platform challenges. Dismissal is elitism, and closes off the movement.

humanamerican@lemmy.zip on 07 May 10:14 collapse

I don’t dismiss people for using malicious software products. I just struggle to understand how they can have their eyes so open about so many things but refuse to look at this particular issue.

pineapple@lemmy.ml on 07 May 05:26 collapse

Many Marxist groups literally use spyware like WhatsApp to organise. I just don’t get it.

humanamerican@lemmy.zip on 07 May 10:10 collapse

My local PSL announces all their events exclusively on Instagram. I brought this up at one of their meetings and they were baffled. “But where else would we make announcements?”

Maddening

FauxLiving@lemmy.world on 06 May 18:13 next collapse

“There is, simply, no way, to ignore privacy. Because a citizenry’s freedoms are interdependent, to surrender your own privacy is really to surrender everyone’s.

You might choose to give it up out of convenience, or under the popular pretext that privacy is only required by those who have something to hide. But saying that you don’t need or want privacy because you have nothing to hide is to assume that no one should have, or could have to hide anything – including their immigration status, unemployment history, financial history, and health records.

You’re assuming that no one, including yourself, might object to revealing to anyone information about their religious beliefs, political affiliations and sexual activities, as casually as some choose to reveal their movie and music tastes and reading preferences.

Ultimately, saying that you don’t care about privacy because you have nothing to hide is no different from saying you don’t care about freedom of speech because you have nothing to say. Or that you don’t care about freedom of the press because you don’t like to read. Or that you don’t care about freedom of religion because you don’t believe in God. Or that you don’t care about the freedom to peaceably assemble because you’re a lazy, antisocial agoraphobe.

Just because this or that freedom might not have meaning to you today doesn’t mean that that it doesn’t or won’t have meaning tomorrow, to you, or to your neighbor – or to the crowds of principled dissidents I was following on my phone who were protesting halfway across the planet, hoping to gain just a fraction of the freedom that my country was busily dismantling.”

– Edward Snowden

imjustmsk@lemmy.ml on 06 May 18:32 next collapse

the classic “you are paranoid”

Collatz_problem@hexbear.net on 06 May 18:48 collapse

I wouldn’t be so paranoid if they weren’t spying on me.

Geodes_n_Gems@lemmy.ml on 06 May 19:10 next collapse

There are people who don’t care about that? Guess I’m lucky.

MrKoyun@lemmy.world on 06 May 19:39 next collapse

This shit’s tiring.

Justifier@lemmy.world on 06 May 19:47 next collapse

I just go full anti tech, which people find ironic since I’m in the tech industry, and they poke fun at that

No matter what you do, no matter what you think or say, people will try their darnedest to poke holes at it

But what you *don’t * do? That’s pretty hard to poke holes at.

“I don’t have a Facebook account” is a brickwall to the conversion. That way in their mind, it’s not that I don’t trust the company, it’s that I don’t even slightly value the product. I have a damn phone, I have to am required to_ pay for the damn phone. It has group chats. What is the value of Facebook again?

Marketplace? I buy everything brand new and keep it until it’s dead

Doomscrolling? Bad habit, not interested

Family connections? I cut most of them off but maybe 4, who know to call/text

Now even thermostats are getting microphones and listening devices, which will absolutely be used to collect data on people from their homes see ecobees new TOS, and the new HoneyWell/ring camera integrations frankly I’m just done with the bullshit. I’m full blown get any phone home technology the fuck out of my house levels of done

But I don’t say that when people ask why I changed my thermostat from the $400 Ecobee, which was a standout feature in my home when they walked in.

No. I say “their servers kept going down and causing issues when I needed it to work”, because people who somehow manage to live without concerning themselves of targeted pricing or snooping practices do care about slight inconveniences, and for whatever reason “they changed their TOS to get people to agree to let them spy on them without legal reprecussions, and if you don’t agree they’ll lock you out of your account barring you from using half the stuff you paid to use” is less logical to their pre-occupied brains than “I got inconvenienced twice a year from down servers”

tiramichu@sh.itjust.works on 06 May 20:03 collapse

I just go full anti tech, which people find ironic since I’m in the tech industry, and they poke fun at that

It’s funny, because they’ve managed to draw completely the wrong conclusion. You aren’t anti-tech despite working in the tech industry, no - you’re anti-tech because of working in the tech industry.

Microtonal_Banana@lemmy.zip on 06 May 20:00 next collapse

Whenever I hear the “only people with something to hide” comment I reply “oh? Then unlock your phone, hand it to me and leave the room.” They always backtrack immediately.

Johnny101@lemmy.world on 07 May 02:55 next collapse

Gosh… why havn’t I thought of saying that

pineapple@lemmy.ml on 07 May 05:21 collapse

This one is really good. I always say “then why do you have walls in your house” but it doesn’t work that well.

Malyca@lemmy.zip on 06 May 20:06 next collapse

Most of us have been trying to educate the boomers since the beginning of the internet. Curiously, some people have become more receptive to security since the rise of techno fascism and scam calls. I’ve convinced several to use a vpn.

posturemaxxing@lemmy.wtf on 07 May 00:24 next collapse

“i have nothing to hide anyways”

“theyre tracking me anyways so it doesnt matter”

“i dont do anything illegal so i dont care if im being tracked”

these quotes make my blood boil

FineCoatMummy@sh.itjust.works on 07 May 15:47 collapse

I’ve also heard

“I’m not important enough for anyone to care what I’m doing.”

I’m like honey this shit is automated at population scale. You don’t have to be important. You only have to be a human.

pineapple@lemmy.ml on 07 May 05:34 collapse

Nice resource that goes over the main objections to people who don’t value there own privacy:

https://blog.rebeltechalliance.org/common-objections-debunked/