There are many enemies of privacy. There are politicians claiming the (at best) misguided pretense of “protecting the children,” intellig...

  • ExtremeDullard@lemmy.sdf.org
    ·
    6 months ago

    From TFA:

    The Brave-haters are almost certainly foaming at the mouth reading that paragraph. They’ll cite concerns like Brave’s affiliate link scandal, the collection of funds ostensibly on behalf of creators without telling them, the installation of programs without user consent

    You don't have to hate Brave to distrust Brave.

    If any of your friends in real life did something fishy to you once, you'd immediately stop talking to him. Possibly, maybe, if your former friend apologized and swore he'd never do it again, and he was convincing enough, and he treated you right for quite some time, maybe you'd take him back as a friend. But even if you did, if he did something fishy to you again, surely you'd dump him for good this time - and probably punch him in the face too.

    The Brave company did this THREE TIMES and there are still people who trust them?

    Me, I don't hate them. I just don't trust them. I wouldn't trust them to run a calculator utility on my computer, let alone something as critical to my digital life as a browser. They lost my trust not once, not twice, but three times.

    In addition, their cryptocurrency thing doesn't help build trust either. I classify anybody who dabbles in crypto as instantly sketchy by default, and they'd have to work extra-hard to earn my trust. Brave has done the exact opposite: they're a crypto-scheme-running bunch who made a supposedly privacy-friendly browser, and I could kind of believe they needed the crypto scheme to make a living. Kind of, but I chose to believe it for a while. Unti Brave did their first fishy thing, and then I instantly uninstalled their browser, never to install it again.

    Brave is NOT trustworthy. In my opinion, if you trust them. you're gullible, or you actively want to believe them too much. It's not hatred, it's just plain common sense.

  • auth@lemmy.ml
    ·
    edit-2
    6 months ago

    Privacy is a thing of the past with modern cars, phones, cameras everywhere, NSA, evidence laundering, credit cards, etc... we need new laws to restore privacy.

    • EngineerGaming@feddit.nl
      ·
      6 months ago

      This defeatist attitude, as well as "all-or-nothing" one, is one of the major privacy enemies by itself.

      modern cars

      You can not own a car at all, have an older one (which, granted, is not quite a universal longterm option), or from wht I've seen in discussions - depending on the model, a lot of them can have the telematics units disconnected.

      phones

      Not using a smartphone, leaving it at home or using a Faraday cage (same goes for a dumbphone), using Lineage/Graphene/whatever on it.

      credit cards

      Cash. Even in a lot of online stores (the smaller ones, not large universal Amazon-like) I've shopped at you can order delivery to the store's office (which is usually at no extra cost) and pay with cash.

      Yes, there are a lot of areas where you have lost. But that doesn't mean you should give up on everything at once then. Privacy is not binary, it is a spectrum.

      • TFO Winder@lemmy.ml
        ·
        6 months ago

        People in USA take pride in using cashless modes.

        I don't understand the flex. You are literally paying commission to a private company for every transaction as well as a permanent record of the purchase in company database linked with so many personally identifiable details.

    • TFO Winder@lemmy.ml
      ·
      6 months ago

      I don't understand, if so many people care about privacy how come no one in the phone/car etc market are able to make good product which cater to these needs?

      • [moved to hexbear]@lemmy.ml
        ·
        6 months ago

        There's no money in privacy.

        Harvesting and selling personal information is practically a continual source of funds with little to no cost. Why spend time and money developing a product with all the data harvesting elements stripped out to appeals to maybe 5-10% of the market?