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by HumblyTossed 1762 days ago
Another way is to publicly protest. If enough people are loud enough, this goes away.
1 comments

totally against this CSAM thing but totally not going to public protest when someone could EASILY twist this to "they wanted the right to keep child porn on their phones without apple knowing about it"
Have an upvote. flatiron is describing a perpetual and insidious issue with activism: many people believe that speaking out on a controversial issue will mean they will be tied to the worst extremes that could follow from the opinions they express. This fear silences them.

This problem is especially prominent in the topic of privacy, which has been made to have a waft of wrongdoing associated with it ("nothing to hide").

The easiest example I've heard is kinda gross and rude, but effective.

"You take a crap with the door closed, not because I don't know what you're doing in there, but because you don't want to share the experience with me."

That pretty much sums up everything you need to know about privacy. You don't have to hide anything in order for it to be important.

Not a bad example, but some would argue that it wouldn't really make any difference if such things were not private—that it's more a matter of habit than any actual advantage. In nature you would want to know that you're alone during that time because it renders you relatively defenseless, physically, but that's not quite as much of an issue in modern society. As such, I prefer to point to situations where privacy remains a practical matter of self-defense: you don't share detailed financial data or your most intimate emotions with the world because there are people who can use that information to manipulate you or otherwise take advantage, e.g. through social engineering. You're not doing anything wrong—I'm not talking about potential blackmail material here—but knowing how much you earn and where you shop and what you buy and how you feel and what topics are likely to provoke an emotional response from you can give someone a great deal of leverage over you, often without you even realizing that you're being manipulated. Advertising is one obvious example of this, but not the only one. Being too open about your private life makes you vulnerable.
As someone said earlier, it punts the argument to how many flaws the scanning process has, instead of the fact that there's even a process to begin with.
They are also describing an issue, which like pretty much the entirety of this Apple fiasco, is completely fictional.

Most of this outrage is about situations people are imagining, situations which often have only the most tenuous of relationships with the actual reality of what is happening.

Sorry you're being downvoted. I'd much rather have a conversation, in which I would point out that literally all bad things that happen are "completely fictional" until they actually happen. Imagining how bad things are likely to occur and working to prevent them is great, join us!
The thing is, at some point you cross the border from "working to prevent bad things that might happen" to the equivalent of "making up a guy to get mad at".

And when it comes to Apple especially, most of the discourse tend to go deep, deep into the latter.

Are there any privacy rights you would be willing to stand up for?