Message from @Beemann
Discord ID: 513780672855408648
Its always good to be wary of new tech, as it should never be the case that we are not in control of it and not the other way around. But i also don't think its good to worry to much about it, as its something that always happens, people in the past feared any new form of tech as "This will do something bad for us".
Which can be partly true, but we will have to see.
I'm not sure how often Alexa will be reporting its owners for crimes just yet.
@Beemann the problem is largely that never before in human history has there been potential to record everything someone does in perpetuity, and then just feed that into an algorithm and figure out how to manipulate them based on that
Humans really aren't equipped to handle the level of privacy invasion that we have going on. Sure, "Don't use their thing" is simple to say but reality for my tech-idiot parents is that they are willingly surrendering all kinds of data they probably don't want to
As an intelligent and tech savvy person I can take countermeasures I'm comfortable with to anonymize my identity, but someone with 100IQ or 85IQ is simply not equipped to handle these threats and they have to be able to live in society too. It's not cool when we create a system that's essentially predatory on people who are less fortunate
😢
I volunteered at a nursing home to help senior citizens with tech issues, I know just how vulnerable folks can be when they aren't aware of tech
I just spent the last 12 hours locked in a closet listening to The Wall on repeat, and I realized.....something fucked up happened in this society.....in my adult lifetime
I think we have always been messed up your just more aware of it now
I used to consider myself a liberal, bordering on extremism, because I espoused the views that Roger Waters put forward in this album.
I listened back to it, especially the big single that came from that album, and I realized that these are not left wing/liberal ideas anymore
@wail you just don't use Google, that's all. As long as companies are honest about data collection I really don't give a shit. It's when they lie about it that I take issue (see: Facebook and Google recording info their services say won't be recorded)
But for everything else, how do you stop someone from creating an algorithm that say, pulls publicly available data from multiple sites and stores that in one place? That's still a lot of information and requires 0 manipulation, and it results in the issue you speak to
Require them to take it down?
Take what down? The consolidated public information? How do you make sure no websites, including ones that don't fall under jurisdiction, do so?
What's public?
If someone was waiting outside my house and following my every movement I'd get a court order to get the stalker hit with a restraining order and if he continues the behavior he'd face consequences
Shit you post on twitter, Facebook, public forums, chat rooms, non privatized public data
It's not the same as leaving your house, it's the same as going to the mall, or some other public space
Right -- Should you be?
I don't think any of these companies have a right to do so, it's part of the problem
You're on their property
I'm not convinced that means they get the right to scan my face, track my biometric data, and stick me into their customer data profile for all eternity
If stepping onto someone's public property means consent to all kinds of invasive shit then you basically have to live like a hermit
Which is inappropriate for a supposedly free society
Society isn't free if there's a camera in the bank?
Should they have the right to sweep up your dead skin cells to scan your genome?
Is there a sign that says "BTW if you enter here we expect your DNA"?
There won't need to be one once it becomes normalized
There needs to be with cameras, and they're normalized
That's not particularly true since there are cameras literally everywhere, but I've never seen a sticker saying, "You are being recorded" in WalMart
And Google et al tell you what you're signing over. The issue is how EULA's and TOS's are handled
Maybe it's off in the break room
So lets say I walk into the Amazon store with an electronic signal jammer
Anything wrong with that?
Canada requires that you have a sign, to my knowledge. If the States doesn't you're probably getting cucked
And I'd assume that signal jamming is banned in such a store, and the TOS likely include not sabotaging their entire system
So it's okay for the arms race to go in one direction, but not for people to take precautions against intrusions of privacy by corporate entities
Gotcha
>why isn't it okay for me to jam signals in a store that operates entirely based on automation and item scanning?
Is this a ruse?