58 points
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Digital privacy.

It was very recently revealed in unsealed court documents from I believe 2013 that the Facebook app pushed a certificate to mobile devices that funneled all of everyone’s decrypted traffic through their servers. That means every webpage visited, every file sent and received, every word typed passed through and was stored on a computer at Facebook HQ. One engineer was quoted as saying that Zuckerberg had a particular interest in looking at people’s Snapchats. It was also revealed that Facebook had a data exchange partnership with Netflix where Netflix had open ended access to user’s private messages.

Now you don’t have to be a Snapchat or Facebook user to see how wrong and downright creepy that is, but if you bring it up with the average person you can see their eyes immediately glaze over. It’s hard to blame them, it feels like a hopeless situation and it’s much more convenient to pretend it’s not happening. People have been completely indoctrinated into abandoning their right to privacy. It’s a real shame because if we were paid as individuals what our data is apparently worth I’m sure that perspective would quickly change.

*Formatting

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11 points

Couldn’t agree more. I was having this conversation with friends back in 08/09. No one took me seriously, but the red flags were all there for everyone to see. Facebook was caught using their platform to run sociological experiments on their users without consent, for example. That alone would get an academic or real researcher in serious trouble. But for an evil-corp like Facebook? Nothing but skepticism or disbelief from most people. It happened, people were harmed. Oh, and remember Myanmar?

The general publics’ overall sense of helplessness, apathy, and/or disbelief that the tech industry is doing anything untoward is their biggest victory. People are happily falling for it all over again with LLMs.

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3 points
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Deleted by creator
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11 points

My eyes don’t glaze over. I’m FURIOUS that they even exist, and have been since they killed myspace.

I knew back in 2008 something wasn’t right about facebook. I had no idea what, but I knew they were sketchy.

By 2010, I knew they were invading peoples privacy. I’ve never had a facebook. And yet, they have my phone number. My mom has facebook, and she stores my phone number in her contacts list.

Thing is, what can I do?

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4 points
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3 points

Speaking of bulletins, when I first heard of the fediverse, I had the total wrong idea.

I thought it would be like you can post on Lemmy, as a bulletin, and Masodon users could see it on their end. (Assuming they were subscribed to the poster).

MY envisionment of how the fediverse worked, based on my misunderstanding would have made for a WAAAAAAAAAY cooler site/collection of sites.

And the fictional ideas I had to take it further would probably make the fediverse the dominant social media standard.

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9 points

I’m curious what steps we can take as individuals to further protect our privacy online.

Also, what do you think we can do as a society to change the status quo? How do we get more people to see that this is a significant problem?

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7 points

Step one: Disconnect

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2 points

How do we get more people to see that this is a significant problem?

This severely inhibits this part of their question. If the only platform you have to communicate with people are places like here, you’re preaching to the choir

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5 points
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I’m curious what steps we can take as individuals to further protect our privacy online.

A few to consider:

  • Ditch Facebook and Whatsapp.
  • Invest in a VPN
  • Switch to Firefox for web browsing
  • Install GrapheneOS on your phone
  • Pay with cash where possible
  • Switch to XMPP with OMEMO encryption for messaging with your favorite people
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4 points
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2 points

Hope your pipe situation got resolved easily.

We had a pipe burst right at the entrance of our crawlspace a few weeks ago and it took a bit to realize. It was a nightmare and now we have to get some foundation work done.

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3 points
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45 points

I pay attention to credit card readers.

I have gotten to know their makes and some models. I have developed preferences. When I go to a run down establishment and they have a nice reader, I am pleasantly surprised. I know that walmart uses ingenico isc250s, and they do not support tap. I know that dunkin has high quality readers, and sometimes tim hortons does too, but less frequently.

When leaving a place, I might say something like “damn, you don’t see that model of verifone very often”, and my friends will look at me funny.

Semi-related, did you know that most receipt printers have embedded telnet servers in them?

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44 points

When some but not all bullets end with a period in a PPT. Drives me nuts! Either have none ending with a period, or all need to have a period, but please don’t mix.

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15 points

Oh fuck you.

Not because you suddenly made me aware of this, but because I catch myself doing this with slides sometimes and figured I was getting away with it!

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6 points

What if one bullet is two sentences… Then should ask bullets end with a period?

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5 points

Yes.

The way I do it is if a list only has single sentences or sentence fragments, I omit the period.

If there is at least one point with two sentences, everyone gets a period.

If a list has sentence fragments and double sentences, I cry. Then I rewrite the fragments into complete sentences, complaining about it the whole time.

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1 point
*

Any second sentence in a bulleted list gets it’s own sub-bullet.

No periods.

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32 points

Civil asset forfeiture in the U.S.

We’re supposed to be “innocent until proven guilty” but they get around this by saying that they’re essentially accusing the money (or car/home or whatever) of being used for crime. Then they confiscate it and the only way to get it back is to go to court and prove that your money is innocent.

The fact that cash/possessions can be taken away from you at anytime by federal agents (or by police in almost every State) without having to follow it up with any sort of case to prove that a crime occurred is ridiculous. And on top of that you can’t get the money back that you spent on attorney fees, so it’s pointless to spend money on an attorney if what was taken was less than a few thousand dollars.

Most people don’t know that this can happen or don’t seem to care enough because, “it would never happen to me, right?”

https://ij.org/issues/private-property/civil-forfeiture/

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31 points

I was into Geocaching for a while and was always amazed at the things out in plain sight that people casually walked by and never noticed every day

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16 points

Very true! And once you’ve done it for a while, you start to notice other cachers by the way they are awkwardly standing in unusual places trying to look inconspicuous.

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8 points

Heh, that’s why we refer to other people who don’t geocache as “muggles”.

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