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14 votes
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Many widely used reproductive health apps fail to protect highly sensitive data, study finds
33 votes -
Google Cloud accidentally deletes UniSuper’s online account due to ‘unprecedented misconfiguration’
41 votes -
Obsolete, but not gone: The people who won't give up floppy disks
23 votes -
ProtonMail discloses user data leading to arrest in Spain
41 votes -
New data shows deadly cost of US officials' failures with COVID in prisons
14 votes -
Big data reveals true climate impact of worldwide air travel
24 votes -
Extraverted introverts, cautious risk-takers, and selfless narcissists: A demonstration of why you can’t trust data collected on MTurk
27 votes -
Data show that the amount of sexual content in top films has sharply declined since 2000
33 votes -
New products collect data from your brain. Where does it go?
4 votes -
How GM tricked millions of US drivers into being spied on (including me)
56 votes -
GM ends OnStar driver safety program after privacy complaints
38 votes -
HHS strengthens privacy of US reproductive health care data
10 votes -
The startup offering free toilets and coffee for delivery workers — in exchange for their data
26 votes -
Looking for help scraping and deleting a Reddit account
I have a couple of old Reddit accounts I’d like to delete as fully as possible. However one of them dates back to my teenage years and it’s some of the only writings I have from that time. Any...
I have a couple of old Reddit accounts I’d like to delete as fully as possible. However one of them dates back to my teenage years and it’s some of the only writings I have from that time. Any recommendations on good simple ways to scrape all the comments off of it and save them? Then what’s the best way to completely erase a Reddit footprint these days?
Looking for as simple a solution as possible, I’m not tech illiterate by any means but it’s also not a real strong suit for me.
18 votes -
Chrome/Firefox Plugin to locally scrape data from multiple URLs
As the title suggests, I am looking for a free chrome or firefox plugin that can locally scrape data from multiple URLs. To be a bit more precise, what I mean by it: A free chrome or firefox...
As the title suggests, I am looking for a free chrome or firefox plugin that can locally scrape data from multiple URLs. To be a bit more precise, what I mean by it:
- A free chrome or firefox plugin
- Local scraping: it runs in the browser itself. No cloud computing or "credits" required to run
- Scrape data: Collects predefined data from certain data fields within a website such as https://www.dastelefonbuch.de/Suche/Test
- Infinite scroll: to load data that only loads once the browser scrolls down (kind of like in the page I linked above)
I am not looking into programming my own scraper using python or anything similar. I have found plugins that "kind of" do what I am describing above, and about two weeks ago I found one that pretty much perfectly does what is described ("DataGrab"), but it starts asking to buy credits after running it a few times.
My own list:
- DataGrab: Excellent, apart from asking to buy credits after a while
- SimpleScraper: Excellent, but asks to buy credits pretty much immediately
- Easy Scraper: Works well for single pages, but no possibility to feed in multiple URLs to crawl
- Instant Data Scraper: Works well for single pages and infinite scroll pages, but no possibility to feed in multiple URLs to crawl
- "Data Scraper - Easy Web Scraping" / dataminer.io: Doesn't work well
- Scrapy.org: Too much programming, but looks quite neat and well documented
Any suggestions are highly welcome!
Edit: A locally run executable or cmd-line based program would be fine too, as long as it just needs to be configured (e.g., creating a list of URLs stored in a .txt or .csv file) instead of coded (e.g., coding an infinite scroll function from scratch).
8 votes -
FYI: This site claims to have harvested 4B+ Discord chats, today all yours for a price
41 votes -
ProtonMail on all the data that Outlook collects about your email
61 votes -
5.25-inch floppy disks expected to help run San Francisco trains until 2030
22 votes -
Sweden's public sector has ditched Big Tech in the name of privacy as a major telecom provider unveiled a new secure collaboration hub
14 votes -
GM sued for sale of OnStar driving data
54 votes -
Wait, does America suddenly have a record number of bees?
27 votes -
CEO of data privacy company Onerep.com (used by the Mozilla Monitor service), founded dozens of people-search firms
44 votes -
GM cuts ties with two data firms amid heated lawsuit over driver data
32 votes -
Seems like all socials are being scraped for AI and personal/aggregate data. Is Tildes?
I was just reminded of that again when going back and looking at some of my old posts on reddit which is openly selling online data. Prompted me to use Redact which erases and overwrites comments...
I was just reminded of that again when going back and looking at some of my old posts on reddit which is openly selling online data. Prompted me to use Redact which erases and overwrites comments before deleting them. But that got me wondering if the same is true of Tildes? And how would we know?
34 votes -
Time to delete your Glassdoor account and data
102 votes -
Tell US Congress: Stop the TikTok ban
32 votes -
Automakers are sharing consumers’ driving behavior with insurance companies
58 votes -
Colorado Bureau of Investigation finds DNA scientist manipulated data in hundreds of cases over decades
31 votes -
What is the most reliable and affordable form of storage medium to use as a backup drive for your computer?
I just had my backup hard drive die and while it did last a few good years, I just want to know what everyone else is using and what gets the best bang for buck.
30 votes -
On International Women's Day, Northern European countries stand out for women who are looking to develop their careers – Iceland secured the top spot
3 votes -
Generative AI - We aren’t ready
27 votes -
The beautiful maths which makes 5G faster than 4G, faster than 3G, faster than…
12 votes -
Tumblr to begin selling user content to AI generative service companies, opt-out will be per blog
75 votes -
Walmart buying TV-brand Vizio for its ad-fueling customer data
48 votes -
UK's NHS faces legal action over contract with data firm Palantir
12 votes -
Vending machine error reveals secret face image database of Canadian college students
72 votes -
Google cut a deal with Reddit for AI training data
23 votes -
Reddit has a new AI training deal to sell user content
67 votes -
Robots.txt governed the behavior of web crawlers for over thirty years; AI vendors are ignoring it or proliferating too fast to block
41 votes -
Introducing Mozilla Monitor Plus, a new tool to automatically remove your personal information from data broker sites
35 votes -
How US anti-abortion ruling spurred federal action against the location data industry
24 votes -
The US hasn't seen syphilis numbers this high since 1950
19 votes -
Bruce Schneier on the US Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's proposed data rules
7 votes -
Criminals are getting increasingly adept at crafting malicious AI prompts to get data out of ChatGPT
22 votes -
Twenty-six billion records exposed in massive leak, including data from Linkedin, X, Dropbox
44 votes -
‘Impossible’ to create AI tools like ChatGPT without copyrighted material, OpenAI says
44 votes -
Question about GDPR
I am in the EU. I asked a company in which I had an account to delete my account. They told me they would do that as long as I sent them an ID and a postal address. This is to ensure that "I am...
I am in the EU.
I asked a company in which I had an account to delete my account. They told me they would do that as long as I sent them an ID and a postal address. This is to ensure that "I am the right person".
I never gave them an ID and a postal address in the first place so how would that verify anything, and I'm using the email that I used to sign-up with them to ask for the deletion.
Am I in the wrong to believe that this should be easier? Are they misinterpreting the GDPR or am I?
What are my options if I do not want to send my ID and postal address?
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Their arguments are:
Article 5(1)(f) of the GDPR requires us to meet security obligations in data processing. Since data deletion is permanent, we need to ensure that the request is indeed from the person concerned.
Furthermore, Article 12(6) of the GDPR states: "…when the data controller has reasonable doubts concerning the identity of the natural person making the request referred to in Articles 15 to 21, he may request the provision of additional information necessary to confirm the identity of the data subject."
10 votes -
Simple Mobile Tools bought by ZipoApps (company offering apps with ads and tracking)
53 votes -
I created a game that is based on data analysis and pattern matching
41 votes