this post was submitted on 02 Aug 2023
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Privacy

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A place to discuss privacy and freedom in the digital world.

Privacy has become a very important issue in modern society, with companies and governments constantly abusing their power, more and more people are waking up to the importance of digital privacy.

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What harm does public data have to you? Couldn't one just ignore the ads? You can't see anyone watching you, is public data good for public records? (I'm just curious). I know this sounds weird but is public data good for historical preservation and knowledge increasing the importance of the individual? And does public data lead to better products?

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[–] [email protected] 122 points 1 year ago (22 children)

Privacy brings security under totalitarian regimes or in countries that shift in that direction. They might say if you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear, but there are unjust conditions under which you have to hide things, like that you belong to minority that is targeted by the authorities. Like the nazis did in the third reich, where privacy was reduced during their takeover. Or that you belong to a party that is suddenly framed as evil and enemies of the nation. Or if you have connections to "traitors" or other "scum".

[–] wsweg 46 points 1 year ago (4 children)

The red scare is a pretty good example for the US

[–] [email protected] 11 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Hell go with the lavender scare too while we’re at it

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[–] [email protected] 91 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Ask that mother and daughter that got arrested for an abortion after facebook ratted them out.

That's why privacy matters. Not because something bad can happen now, but because that information can be weaponized down the road

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[–] [email protected] 61 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The more there is known about you, the easier you are to be manipulated.

If you read George Orwell‘s 1984 or watch the Cambridge Analytica documentary on Netflix you get an idea.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I started to read 1984 a couple years ago but it is so triggering I had to stop. It really sets your head straight. Might start again soon.

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[–] [email protected] 54 points 1 year ago (1 children)

This was a reply I posted on "What should I say when someone says they "don't have anything to hide"?" In ask Lemmy a week ago, and I think it's still applicable here

They don't choose what they need to hide, if their government outlaws woodworking tomorrow, then any carpenters today go from "having nothing to hide" to "I need to hide my entire career and hobby" overnight and in their sleep.

And then the government threatens Facebook to hand over messages from any user suspected of woodworking, and then they get persecuted and arrested

The government threatens Google to hand over all browser history from suspected woodworkers, Apple for all iCloud photos from suspected woodworkers, Amazon for all woodworking related purchases

It goes on

If the carpenter cared about privacy from the start, then the government just wouldn't be able to find them and arrest them for simply woodworking

But the carpenter didn't care about privacy, they "had nothing to hide" yesterday, so when that law goes into effect tomorrow the government will have a really easy time finding them

[–] [email protected] 33 points 1 year ago

Then replace woodworking with abortion and you no longer need to imagine it happening, you can watch it live in 4K.

[–] [email protected] 42 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

Well...

  1. Target once used small amounts of shopping data to accurately predict women were pregnant before they themselves knew.

  2. A Nebraska PD got data from Facebook to prove a woman had an abortion recently and prosecuted her.

  3. you don't know what will become illegal

So, even small amounts of data can predict lots of things about your life. The government has a track record of using that data to prosecute you. And you cannot trust the Government will always align with your morals (assuming it even does right now).

And that doesn't even consider other entities & organizations in the world.

What if an insurance company wants uses public data about you to deny you coverage? What if someone is searching for people in the area with ideal houses to rob and you're on vacation? What if they use a deepfake of a loved one to scam you? Steal your identity and ruin your credit? What if they make and sell deepfake porn made of you or a loved one? What if they create meticulously engineered political psyop campaigns hand-tailored to exploit your psychology? What if this list of "what ifs" could go on nearly forever, and some "what ifs" aren't even things we're capable of knowing about?

Because that last one is absolutely true, all the rest of those are true for someone, and at least one of them is probably true for you already.

Ok, but what if you don't care?...well someone else in your life does. And even if they have impeccable data privacy habits, if enough of their friends and family don't, then they're just a single missing puzzle piece, and everyone can still see their shape.

Not to mention, you contribute to a pool of data that's used to perform these kinds of analyses on society at large, meaning you contribute in some part to each and every instance of malicious data use towards anyone, anywhere.

Is that a good enough reason to care?

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[–] [email protected] 40 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Honestly, sometimes my best answer is "none of your business". Its none of Google's business what my hobbies are. The fact that there's no "harm" in it is irrelevant. I want to be left alone, I should be able to without an advanced knowledge of cyber security.

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[–] [email protected] 37 points 1 year ago

puts on tinfoil hat

You know how women (and some doctors) had problems in the US because the states were getting information on whether they had, were thinking of having, or were having conversations about having an abortion?

You know how there was a possibility (or maybe that really happened, I don't remember) that the state governments could be aquiring information from women's period tracking apps and acquiring their behavioral patterns to find out if they were planning on having an abortion?

Well, I'm not a woman, but I am disabled. After I got fired from my job because I couldn't perform anymore thanks to my disability, (there was no discrimination, I literally could not do my job because of my disability) I applied for disability payment.

I was rejected.

After that, I tried to look for other jobs, but for some strange reason, I couldn't find a job ANYWHERE in the US. They never called back after telling me they would do a background check on me. I applied for about 70+ companies, I got background checks on 20+.

That didn't happen before I applied for the disability payments, and as an immigrant that was below the poverty line I wasn't someone that could put up a fight... Against whom? The companies? The government? I didn't even know if the fact that I applied for the disability payments was the problem.

At the end, I was able to find a job in a call center working from home. But it took me 8 months for that.

takes off tinfoil hat

It's a double edged sword, youcan make better products and a better experience for some things, but some people/companies think of other people, especially minorities, disabled, and probably women, as liabilities, and they don't really want that.

This is why I rather have privacy, the ads are just annoying asf, but the things I said are just 2 examples of why privacy is important.

Hopefully I make sense, and sorry for any grammatical mistakes, English is not my first language.

[–] BombOmOm 37 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

When other people are at your house, why do you close the door to the bathroom when you are pooping?

"You can’t see anyone watching you" Why not just close your eyes, you won't see your house guests watching you poop.

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[–] [email protected] 34 points 1 year ago

How confident are you that this stolen private data won't become a tool against you at some point ? I'm not talking about hackers and impersonators (which are huge problems on their own), but anything you do could be used against you in a fascist regime.

If the records of Jewish people didn't exist prior to WW2, the Jew extermination wouldn't have been so easy. To consider that what you do or who you are won't be something you or your descendants would be oppressed for in the future is a very dangerous bet.

By protecting my privacy I'm not taking any chances, and it's actually making my life better through not being targeted by ads. Why would I do things differently?

[–] [email protected] 29 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

“Can’t you just ignore the ads?” No. No you can’t. Ads aren’t tucked away in the corner of a page, waiting for your focus. They are invasive and built solely to attract attention; even compete for it. So no, you can’t ignore them anymore than you can ignore a 3y old wailing 3 ft from your ear.

Information is power. And someone will exploit it. That’s human nature. Create an innocuous database of how high people can jump and that data will be exploited. Somehow. Someone will use it for their own gains. Does that fundamentally hurt you? Maybe. Maybe not. But there is always a risk of having information put to nefarious use.

Best to just never get there as a society.

[–] [email protected] 12 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

"Can’t you just ignore the ads?" Not if they specifically, psychologically, using the most advanced technology, tailored and made specifically so you personally can't ignore them, using the data they gathered. And then you just have to hope that it's an ad making you buy shit you don't need, and not a psyop compaign made for you to change religion, worldview, voting decisions.

[–] [email protected] 28 points 1 year ago

Every comment here is missing a crucial point. The data is used to identify what kind of person you are and then manipulate you based on that. It's not just to target specific ads to you. It is to control how you behave in any way that will profit them. An example of what has been done is to identify democrats that were unlikely to be convinced to switch to republican, so instead they targeted them with content that would get them to not vote at all.

[–] [email protected] 26 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Couldn't you just ignore the ads?

That's not how ads work, they are extremely manipulative and leave lasting impressions on your psyche, even if you conciously reject their message.

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[–] [email protected] 25 points 1 year ago

The same reason I close my doors.

[–] [email protected] 24 points 1 year ago (3 children)

No offence, but I don't know how people are still asking this question with the amount of large scale data breaches that are happening these days. People are having all their money, maybe even their entire identity, stolen by criminals who have access to their data via these breaches. Just recently an Australian woman was ordered by US courts to pay Adidas and the NBA $1.2 million because criminals gained access to her PayPal account through a data breach and used it to commit fraud.

Privacy isn't just some abstract idea - there can be real world consequences for those who trust governments and companies with large amounts of their personal data. That's why so many of us look to limit our digital attack surface by opting out of data collection and/or choosing privacy respecting alternatives where possible.

But to be clear, it isn't solely about direct harm right now. Personally I believe everyone should have the right to privacy both online and offline, so I choose not to assist governments and corporations that seek to erode that right. This point doesn't get made much, because normies don't understand why something is important unless you can directly show it impacting their life, but it is arguably more important than any of the direct harm stuff. Even if the realistic threat to me is minimal, I will still continue to advocate for privacy because I believe it is the right thing to do.

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[–] [email protected] 24 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

Here in the States your data can not only be used to trace where you live, and who your loved ones are, but also how to assure you will be convicted of an imprisonable offense, given the average American commits three felonies a day (mostly violations of the CFAA. If you're not a pro-authority fascist, espionage and conspiracy can often be tossed in to extend your sentence.)

For most of us American shlubs, it's not a big deal. If you're a ten year old girl and make your own Facebook page (that's a felony) no one is going to care much...

...unless you have significant liquidatable assets known to law enforcement.

...unless you cross the police on an unlucky day and one of them holds a grudge.

...unless you have enemies in high places, say, a state senator.

...or unless an official wants your real property / intellectual property / spouse and you're in the way.

Then, yeah, it's a matter of finding something that will convince a judge or jury that you need to be locked away. And if you are as privacy-conscious as a typical US citizen, they will find something. Maybe something even worth sending a SWAT team to serve your warrant over.

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[–] Rusticus 18 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You may have nothing to hide, but you have everything to protect.

Hypothetical: if everyone has access to your data and habits it is trivial to modify that data to frame you for nefarious activities. In other words, why the fuck would you want every rando to be searching in your underwear drawer?

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[–] [email protected] 17 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Why don't you go ahead and post your browser history and location data for the last 6 months?

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[–] [email protected] 16 points 1 year ago

Marketing use alone fucks the world up with peoples data.

[–] Telcontar 16 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I just came across this link on social cooling from another post a few days ago. The amount of information that can be gathered on you is frightening. I just want to be able to control my own data rather than it being taken from me.

Edit: This was also a super interesting read on what privacy actually is as a concept as well as analyzing the social balance of privacy and security.

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[–] [email protected] 16 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You give company A your data for a service. They provide you that service. However, unknown to you they sell your data to company B to make a few bucks. You did not authorize this, you did not know about this, you don't know who company B is, and you have no idea to what purpose company B will put your data to. Best to not have this happen by not giving the data to company A to begin with.

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[–] [email protected] 15 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

For me personally, its for a variety of reasons

1: Targeted ads and algorithms and such are typically used to manipulate you to feel a certain way or hold opinions you may otherwise not have. This has been demonstrated and shown to happen several times, such as with Cambridge Analytica, and its pretty concerning. I want to see things for myself and form my own opinions, not just being manipulated to believe what some big tech company or advertisers or the like want me to think.

2: Just think about all the data a lot of these companies can and are collecting on you. For instance, if you're on a regular fully Googled Android phone, Google pretty much has access to your physical location at all times. What possible need is there for this? Why does Google always need to know where I am? Just looking at it simply, its none of their business, and no justifiable reason for them to know it. There's no possible benefit or good thing that could come out of Google knowing my wheareabouts 24/7. If there's no reason for them to know the info, why give them it on a silver platter?

3: The data being collected is also usually handled very poorly as seen through constant data breaches of sensitive information and the like, and can also be easily abused in general. I myself have been personally targetted and stalked, and the stalker got mine and my family's information from data broker websites. Its pretty scary the amount of information these companies collect and share and make freely available about you, and it can be easily used against you.

4: Another example of the data being collected being misused is for example what's happening in China, with the social credit system. The social credit system basically determines what you can do and everything about your life, such as job opportunities and employment, access to finance and banks, ability to travel, and a lot more, based off a variety of factors, from things like what you post or do online, to even who you're friends with, and more. While you may argue that this is just China and there's nothing to worry about, similar systems to this are already being worked on and tried by US employers and companies, and there's nothing stopping things comparable to the social credit system from happening or being put in place in the West or elsewhere in this current surveillence capitalism world we live in. Something like this happening should absolutely concern you.

5: People have straight up had their lives ruined as a result of this mass data collection and privacy invasiveness. For instance, I remember hearing a story of a man who shared his Google account with his uncle. His uncle murdered someone, with his Googled Android phone in his possession, and Google provided the location data and such to the police, and instead the nephew was accused of the crime, and basically had his entire life ruined because of it, over something he didn't even do. Just look at what's going on now with abortion in some states in the US for another example. Its pretty scary to think about things like this happening, as it really could happen to anyone.

At the end of the day, these companies like Facebook and Google aren't your friends. Trust is earned, and I don't think any of these big tech companies earn it based off their actions and track record. What I do and how I live my life is none of their business or concern, and that's how I feel about it, and wish more people would see it the same way, or at least put some thought into it instead of blindly accepting mass surveillance and data collection.

(Hopefully this all makes sense and wasn't too rambly, pretty tired rn lol)

[–] [email protected] 15 points 1 year ago

I am not a product for these corporations to sell.

[–] [email protected] 15 points 1 year ago

i think women who want the freedom to decide what they can do with their own bodies shows you how important privacy is. the was a cop in california sending out of state licenses to the home state governmemt to report women crossi g state lines for abortions.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 1 year ago

I'm in no means an expert here, but over the last 10 years or so, I've been trying to learn as much as I can. I am still in the boat of trying to find meaningful, impactful ways of explaining to people around me, why they should care about privacy.

Here's what I would challenge anyone who takes the time to read this to do. Choose a random user in this thread. Any one of them. Go to their profile page, and see what you can learn about that person based on comment/post history.

Did you get an idea of where in the world they live? The problems they're facing? The things they like? Now. Think like you were someone trying to harm/exploit them. Think of some products you could put in front of them that they could not live without.

Now we take that information, and start to put it together, we think, okay how do we manipulate this person into purchasing this thing.

Maybe we target a fake news article, stating "(target user's generation) choosing between paying rent and purchasing (target product)"

Now that person starts to think "whoa, in not the only one that's struggling with this decision, and others are choosing the purchase"

Now, maybe we target an influencer video to them, about how much better their lives are with that product.

Pretty soon, we put together a picture of how quickly and easily we could create an algorithm to manipulate someone into buying something that they would not have made the informed decision to buy. Now they value the product even if they can't afford it...

I'm literally realizing this as I'm typing it... And it kind of terrifies me.

All of this is completely ignoring the concern of government entities, with I'll intention, using the information against you...

[–] [email protected] 12 points 1 year ago

For me, it's identity theft.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 1 year ago

If your data is available to the public, people can also learn your behaviour, likes and dislikes. From that information

  1. Authorities can coerce you to do something you do not want to do (like make a false claim) because if you don't they can use your dislikes and deny your likes to make you suffer until you relent
  2. Advertisers can push advertisements of things you like and make you spend a lot more
  3. Thieves will know when is the most likely time that you and your family be at home and break in during those times
[–] [email protected] 11 points 1 year ago

I would add that privacy and security are related. If there is less data on you, it is harder to commit fraud against you.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 1 year ago (1 children)

A lot of people are giving good examples, and good answers. But I want to make an analogy instead.

Let's think back to the time before the internet. 1970s. If somebody wanted to know everything about you they needed to stalk you. And that was very time-consuming. They needed to follow you everywhere you go, they needed to read all of your mail before you opened it, they needed to look through your trash, they needed to talk to all your friends to get all the information about you. Having a stalker was a serious time commitment from the stalker.

Fast forward to today, stalking is now trivial, and cheap. Thanks to new technology, data aggregation, and data brokers, every single person has a virtual stalker following them 24/7 who is dirt cheap for anybody to hire. So what would have been a crazy stalker in the 1970s can be used by anybody now to learn everything about you and do anything to you. That includes the police, that includes advertisers, that includes power tripping angry exs.

In the 1970s if you had a stalker you had a serious problem and people would help you stop the stalker. Even if the stalker did nothing illegal the fact that they were focusing so intensely on you would be enough for everyone to realize you're in a bad situation. Today that's the norm. So privacy is basically saying you don't want a 24/7 stalker for hire following specifically you.

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[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 year ago

Imagine an insurance company using data about you that it purchased from FB or Twitter to give you different insurance rates.

Or your social posts or posts tagged of you affecting your credit score or job application or even your rent application.

There are so many scenarios where having your privacy respected would protect you from unnecessary and unfair judgement.

[–] thantik 10 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Sometimes not even ignoring the ads is possible because they are vectors for malware as well.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malvertising

There's a whole set of instances in the past where someone was innocently wanting to make a little money from their website, only to have all of their users infected with malware because of it. These instances utilized newly discovered exploits to run without interaction at all. Meaning you can't simply ignore them, even just browsing a page with them was enough to infect people.

Ads aren't just annoying, but they're a vector for malware. And even if they weren't, ignoring them isn't enough to get your brain not to notice them at all. You'll always subconsciously obtain associations of brands, etc. It's literally an invasion of your brain.

[–] tungah 10 points 1 year ago (1 children)
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[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 year ago

There's plenty of reasons not to try and keep things private! It is a lot easier for comments on Lemmy, for example, to be public, rather than trying to make the discussion threads private among some set of authorized participants.

And if I am rating movies on Netflix, I really do want them to take my ratings and put them in a big machine learning pile to try and find me better movies. That's the point of rating the things.

But there's a big difference between me actually sharing information with people so they can do good, and people trying to collect information about me without my permission so that they can make money, or, worse, try to manipulate me later.

And even if the data is not in itself all that worthy of secrecy, and I might be willing to share it, someone else deciding for me that they get to follow me around and see what I am up to or what I like, without actually asking or without genuinely expecting that I might say no, is... not how consent works.

Also, some of the point of this is that one cannot in fact genuinely ignore advertisements. At the very least they constitute a cognitive load, where it is harder to do or see things because the advertisements are in the way. They can also hammer brand names and desired associations into people's heads, to ensure that most people know that e.g. X Brand Soda is the "luxury" soda. And of course in aggregate they cause people to buy things. Each person might choose to buy the thing of their own apparently free will, but running the ad will cause more people to make that decision than would otherwise.

Where they are most dangerous is when advertisements try and create problems, rather than just offering products. A sign that says "We sell Coke" is fine. Three commercials a day asking if you are guilty of "old-shoeing", the social faux pas of having old shoes, look at this man being laughed at for it, etc. are dangerous, even if they never try to sell a product.

These kinds of marketing campaigns are that much more effective if they can be targeted at the people who are the easiest to convince that made up problems are real. And while one's general personality is not exactly a secret, we also don't want scammers like this going around making lists of the particularly gullible.

[–] LazerDickMcCheese 8 points 1 year ago

Personally, its more about something being taken from me without consent and the ramifications that might have on society. And down voting you for asking this question is not conducive to a long lasting community

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 year ago

Privacy is important everywhere, people most often answer this question regarding digital privacy, but think about in your everyday life. For example, I just bought a house. Buying a house is public record here in the states. The moment you buy a house companies will grab that data and then start trying to sell you services. They will use the name of the bank that you took out a loan with, they know your loan number, loan type, loan amount, full name and address. They will do everything to misrepresent who they are as if they come from the bank that holds your loan to sign you up for some service you most likely don't want or don't need. Older people fall for it all the time. Digitally it just gets worse.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 year ago

One problem is that you don't know who's actually hoarding your data and for what purpose.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 year ago

For me, it is about removing an attack vector crazy people might use. We live in a time where people can seek revenge for the pettiest things. In thepastt, I had gotten into an argument on reddit over something harmless and they doxxed me and sent a warning to my house. I deleted everything and overhauled my privacy.

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