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by MonkeyClub 1275 days ago
> I cannot see the issue because the regex are pre-approved by GitHub.

GitHub is a private company with one dual obligation, to prolong its existence and keep increasing its profit margin.

It is not any sort of arbiter for morality - morality being an externality to its central obligation - so it cannot be relief upon to “do the right thing”.

So it is not in any position of authority that would enable it to “approve”, in the moral sense of the word. They can only “allow” for the regex to be ran and the results sent off.

For example, the “right thing” for GH would be to increase profit, while for another entity might instead be to uphold its users’ privacy.

(You may think that it’s only for public repos, so they’re already made public, but isn’t GH here facilitating an aggressive collection and summation of information, that would otherwise be much more difficult and error-prone?)

The power of approval would rather come from an elected entity that would also determine who may request that such searches are executed, and which reasons would be valid.

Otherwise, we get a William Gibson-esque megacorp cyberspace future with clear but corporate Orwellian overtones.

Isn’t this obvious?

(I’m not being snarky at all - I’m genuinely asking: isn’t this glaringly and terrifyingly obvious?)

1 comments

Generally when you come up with something from first principles that appears to be "terrifyingly obvious", that thing is false.

Microsoft's mission in life is to do whatever its directors want, insofar as its shareholders don't get /too/ annoyed about this, and to not break the law. They have no actual "obligations" or "fiduciary duties" to keep increasing profits or anything like that.

So they have no duty towards the general public either, until the public’s too irritated with them, and calls for overview. How’s that better, or any different at all?
I don't understand what you're trying to say here.
They’re not your friends, they’re out to profit from anything they can grab from you, so on principle, DON’T TRUST THEM.
They’re not out to profit from anything they can get though. They’re out to do Microsoft things.

This is pretty obvious; most companies stay in their industry even if it becomes irrelevant. Furniture companies rarely switch to software and software companies rarely just start selling heroin. (Except for gacha games.)