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by kbenson
2492 days ago
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I'm pretty sure that's a good way to get the endpoint flagged as a target of abuse, and the page pulled until they can figure out what's going on, resulting in anyone who wants to opt-out after that point either running into a temporary or permanent problem, depending if they ever bother to put it back online. How about instead of fraudulently providing someone else's credit card because "we know best", we just make sure to spread the pages as much as possible where appropriate, and let people make their own educated choices (and hopefully it opens their eyes to other places in their lives they can do so as well). I understand the impetus to help, but it's important to consider that what one person views as helping another might view as terribly invasive in itself. |
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This is a sense of decency that the surveillance companies didn't share. People didn't make any sort of educated choice to be surveilled - the surveillance companies arrogantly "opted" them in. Opting them out is much lesser transgression onto their will.
I do agree from the practical perspective - surveillance companies will parry any legible bulk activity into an excuse to continue surveilling. Fine point white text at the bottom of the homepage: "Due to an attack from scary hackers, all opt out requests from 2019 have had to be discarded. If you had submitted a request during that time, please resubmit your request. To protect yourself in the future, buy our nonsensical "identity insurance" for only $10/mo."