| Appreciated HN Community, I, naively, really had hope on the Don't be Evil motto. But the Google's
trend of invading our privacy a bit more every day without asking at all
for our permission, tracking absolutely everything, I think it's getting
too far. Their open support to TTP has felt like a slap in the face of
awakening reality. Their presumed support Hillary also concerns me quite a bit. As a techie, I admire a lot of their work (I may be easy audience,
but Google Maps really flips me out), but I think we should worry
about limits in the name of progress. I wouldn't mind to give some
personal data away to enjoy some of their services, but I want to
know and decide which data I give away. I have recently checked
myactivity.google.com and what I saw there was quite terrifying. I'm aware how highly I depend on their services. I have an Android phone,
Gmail as my main email account, organise myself with Google Calendar,
I browse the web with Chrome, solve every question with Google Search,
and get directions with Google Maps. Since my unconditional love for the company has clearly been damaged I think
it's time to start looking for alternative services. I have replaced Google Search with Duckduckgo. That was easy. It feels a bit
slower, and I still miss how google suggestions know what I want before I type
it, but it could work. Fully replacing Gmail is going to take a while, but I
think Protonmail is a nice alternative. I don't mind paying the yearly
subscription if I'm still happy with it when the space limit becomes a problem.
I have come back to Firefox even though some things feel smoother on Chrome,
which I haven't totally abandoned. A work in progress. The thing is, what about Android, is there any solution you would recommend?
(Apple products are not an option) And to Google Maps? How do you guys manage
the balance privacy/usability/comfort? |
If you are already depending on Google for email, contacts, map services, identification services(Google Plus login, Google Identity platform), then it is very hard to change the status quo. One problem is the compatibility/migration, another is lack of quality open-source/private solutions. Google gives you everything free so you wouldn't want to migrate to a paid service.
As an experiment, I tried de-activating my Facebook account, and I was surprised to realize that I am also losing half of my contacts (on Facebook Messager) and half of my music collection (on Spotify, with Facebook sign-in, which cannot be transferred to an email-only account).
I wrote a blog post on this issue and how to avoid being dependent, but the alternatives would not be applicable to Google products:
https://paradite.com/2016/02/18/stay-independent-problems-wi...