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16 votes
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Google and Mastercard cut a secret ad deal to track retail sales
26 votes -
While Google is attacked over privacy concerns and perceived bias, DuckDuckGo raised $10M
44 votes -
DNS Privacy
11 votes -
Mozilla: Changing our approach to anti-tracking
34 votes -
The tech industry is lobbying for federal data & privacy regulation that is friendly to the tech industry, but hostile to users' interests
11 votes -
Venmo's public API exposes millions of transactions, startling users
10 votes -
Phone Numbers Were Never Meant as ID. Now We’re All At Risk
22 votes -
Tildes code of conduct
Tildes code of conduct says Do not post anyone's sensitive personal information (related to either their real world or online identity) with malicious intent. Can you change that to just say don't...
Tildes code of conduct says
Do not post anyone's sensitive personal information (related to either their real world or online identity) with malicious intent.
Can you change that to just say don't post personal info? Even if it's not done with malicious intent it should still be removed to protect people's privacy.
Also while it does say to not post spam on tildes terms of service I think It should say that on the code of conduct.
Edit: I mean posting personal info without consent and not public information.
Telling someone how to contact a company would be fine but not posting someone's address.
12 votes -
How I recorded user behaviour on my competitor’s websites
32 votes -
Danah Boyd - The messy fourth estate
5 votes -
Facebook will pull its data-collecting VPN app from the App Store over privacy concerns
7 votes -
Docker for Mac and Windows requires Docker Store login
24 votes -
Blind loyalty - How a social network is redefining the future of corporate culture
14 votes -
I don't trust Signal
18 votes -
The Data Detox Kit- An 8 day challenge to clean up your online data.
16 votes -
Giving up on privacy
I have been an advocate for privacy for a long time, but recently I don't even know why I am doing this anymore. I do most of my browsing through TOR, and that has made me give up a lot of...
I have been an advocate for privacy for a long time, but recently I don't even know why I am doing this anymore. I do most of my browsing through TOR, and that has made me give up a lot of conveniences. And that's what I miss. I miss not having to think about privacy. I also miss not feeling like I am being spied on. Now I am torn. I don't like companies like Google mining my data, but I also think I am being paranoid (the people in my life have shared this sentiment). I don't want to leave a permanent cache of my mind. But I also feel like doing so won't really affect me. Not to mention that I despise the predatory nature of advertisers, and I hate giving them even more info about me.
What do I do, Tildes? Have any of you felt this way? How do you balance running from Google while still staying sane?
46 votes -
How many of you host your own email server? Do you recommend hosting one?
I was thinking of setting up my own email server, just for learning and privacy stuff. Which VPS provider would you recommend? What are the major challenges one might face while hosting own email?
24 votes -
Google tracks your movements, like it or not
20 votes -
Australia's crypto-busting bill still on the table
6 votes -
CCleaner provokes fury over Active Monitoring, user data collection
28 votes -
Anonymity on Tildes
I had a thought, which I'm not sure I agree with, but figured it would be a good conversation. So much of our social discourse, and exploitation of our social platforms, can be associated with...
I had a thought, which I'm not sure I agree with, but figured it would be a good conversation.
So much of our social discourse, and exploitation of our social platforms, can be associated with anonymity. Given the divisiveness of our times, it feels like it's almost a pre-req for a platform like this (this has already been discussed in other threads).
A slightly different question: Is there ever a place for folks that want to announce their identity, and go through something like a Twitter verification process? This could feed into the future trust/reputation feature.
24 votes -
Why you need a network-wide ad-blocker
17 votes -
Facebook in talks with banks to add your financial information to Messenger
18 votes -
The federal government's My Health Record system is capable of storing genomic information, which could turbocharge medical research but has intensified privacy and security fears
5 votes -
Alberta privacy commissioner to investigate use of facial recognition software on Calgary malls
9 votes -
Spotify user requests GDPR data, gets 250 MB of extremely detailed data, down to the headphone brand.
@steipete: Tried the GDPR data export from Spotify. By default, you get like 6 JSON files with almost nothing. After many emails and complaining and a month of waiting, I got a 250MB archive with basically EVERY INTERACTION I ever did with any Spotify client, all my searches. Everything.
34 votes -
'Spycam porn' sparks record protests in South Korea
6 votes -
My Health concessions 'woefully inadequate', says former Australian Medical Association president
3 votes -
At least two malls are using facial recognition technology to track shoppers' ages and genders without telling
10 votes -
What we have now is not advertising
23 votes -
The Federal Government will change the law to reassure Australians their privacy will be protected in the My Health Record system
4 votes -
Why the "I have nothing to hide." argument is flawed.
24 votes -
Australians are 'rightly' concerned about trusting My Health Record, says Privacy Commissioner
4 votes -
A withering verdict: MPs report on Zuckerberg, Russia and Cambridge Analytica
14 votes -
When a stranger decides to destroy your life
28 votes -
US Congress demands Jeff Bezos explain Amazon’s face recognition software
15 votes -
Police facial recognition system faces legal challenge
3 votes -
On the engineer's responsibility in protecting privacy (Paul Baran, RAND, 1968)
10 votes -
Departing Facebook security officer's memo: "We need to be willing to pick sides"
6 votes -
Millions of Australians to opt out of My Health Record as backlash builds
3 votes -
How to block ads like a pro
34 votes -
The tragedy of the data commons
3 votes -
My Health Record: Confusion as some Australians shocked they already have one
0 votes -
Dozens of PC games drop Red Shell tracking software after surveillance fears
10 votes -
Public Telegram, private strife | The precarious future of messaging apps
3 votes -
On the future computer era modification of the American character and the role of the engineer, or, a little caution in the haste to number (1968)
7 votes -
Health insurers are vacuuming up details about you — and it could raise your rates
10 votes -
When you have a serious hereditary disease, who has a right to know?
4 votes -
Hooktube is dead
Hooktube.com used to provide a private way to view youtube vids, blocking ads, bypassing region locks, and also pulling comments and search results via the api. All you had to do was replace the...
Hooktube.com used to provide a private way to view youtube vids, blocking ads, bypassing region locks, and also pulling comments and search results via the api. All you had to do was replace the you in a youtube link with hook.
No more. On July 11, this appeared on the changelog:
HookTube no longer uses YouTube api for anything, and most features (channel page, search, related videos, etc) are gone. No choice.
Which was extremely bad, but at least you could still watch videos privately right?
July 16: YouTube api features are back but mp4 <video> is replaced with the standard YT video embed. HookTube is now effectively just a light-weight version of youtube and useless to the 90% of you primarily concerned with denying Google data and seeing videos blocked by your governments.
rest in pieces
It was a good run, 1.5 years. Started as a quickly made addition to the norbot project, and within long the server had to be upgraded several times. Of course YouTube Legal was an inevitability at that point.
Special thanks to the many people who created plugins and extensions for hooktube, /g/, the five people who donated anonymously, and BitChute for working hard on a real YouTube alternative. HookTube will remain operational in the present state for those who only needed it for performance reasons. See you in the next project.:(
Alternatives include: invidio.us, youtube-dl, the Freetube desktop app, Newpipe for Android, and
you’re doomed if you use iOS.ETA: Actually, I just remembered, there’s Media Grabber for the Workflow app. And Invidio mostly works on mobile.15 votes