I get what the author is going for, but I always come back to the feeling that these are self-created problems for the most part.
The author does point to the CEO and his love interest and that being exposed on social media and there was much destruction in their lives, but it had really nothing to do with social media; it had to do with their behavior in the human world, and social media just accelerated the discovery.
And on so many of the other points, it’s funny how I’m not on tiktok, instagram, facebook, or any of the privacy destroying apps looking for attention and posting personal information, and curiously /s I have none of the described problems.
I cannot relate to this lamentation.
I’m a huge privacy advocate, you should be able to intuit that from my comment, so don’t come at me saying I don’t value privacy, my point is that when you put your information out in the world and you act like a drama factory or an idiot, guess what??? And furthermore what the fuck were you doing sending your DNA to some random corporation???
We are on Lemmy. My only social media and most others around here. You are preaching to the choir. “And nobody cares” no, lots of people care. Just most people are too uninformed or boring to do anything about it.
In a way I was miffed by the very posting of the article. It misses the mark so hard. There was an opportunity to talk about privacy, instead bemoans the completely expected outcomes of being a drama queen online while also voluntarily vacating one’s own privacy. Yeah, just annoyed a bit more than anything.
TBH I was going to say something similar, but it strikes me that using non-corporate open source social media doesn’t in any way protect you from people at a restaurant laughing filming and uploading your tragedy
I get what the author is going for, but I always come back to the feeling that these are self-created problems for the most part.
The author does point to the CEO and his love interest and that being exposed on social media and there was much destruction in their lives, but it had really nothing to do with social media; it had to do with their behavior in the human world, and social media just accelerated the discovery.
And on so many of the other points, it’s funny how I’m not on tiktok, instagram, facebook, or any of the privacy destroying apps looking for attention and posting personal information, and curiously /s I have none of the described problems.
I cannot relate to this lamentation.
I’m a huge privacy advocate, you should be able to intuit that from my comment, so don’t come at me saying I don’t value privacy, my point is that when you put your information out in the world and you act like a drama factory or an idiot, guess what??? And furthermore what the fuck were you doing sending your DNA to some random corporation???
We are on Lemmy. My only social media and most others around here. You are preaching to the choir. “And nobody cares” no, lots of people care. Just most people are too uninformed or boring to do anything about it.
Some of us are even more niche than that
In a way I was miffed by the very posting of the article. It misses the mark so hard. There was an opportunity to talk about privacy, instead bemoans the completely expected outcomes of being a drama queen online while also voluntarily vacating one’s own privacy. Yeah, just annoyed a bit more than anything.
Yeah man I get it. Right there with you.
Or maybe, just maybe, we’re a subgroup who isn’t counted because we choose to be anonymous (public forums such as þis notwiþstanding).
It may be survivor bias, in þat we know about lots of people who have no privacy, because þey haven’t tried to.
TBH I was going to say something similar, but it strikes me that using non-corporate open source social media doesn’t in any way protect you from people at a restaurant laughing filming and uploading your tragedy