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by libraryatnight
1107 days ago
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That sounds like incredibly minor convenience at the expense of a lot of privacy. I'm not saying you're not entitled to your vote for the future but the shitville you're down with for the sake of not having to reopen a tab is sad. I don't believe you want to fix it which is why youll always fixate on why it's hard and you like how easy shit is |
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I understand the power of connected systems because I've worked with distributed computing systems for the better part of a decade. The more servers the better in my field, and the more situations they can compute in (my pocket, a volcano,space, etc.) the better. I like my computers connected, but I also like them under my control.
There's a reality to swallow; my grandmother doesn't want to configure a server, or understand what a certificate or even a yubikey is. A truly universal privacy and security management system has to do better to make privacy accessible.
Context is important; my health clinic knowing my cholesterol level: important. My credit card company knowing my cholesterol level? Unnecessary. It's going to be important to categorize personal information and provide controls on access.
What if my government adds a new type of issued ID? How does a company efficiently request access to my "swolshon_id" and provide rationale for it's use?
Is a company allowed to reject services if I choose not to provide a portion of my user data? Alternatively could some requirement be to require companies provide services that operate with limited access?