Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by Avamander 1046 days ago
> this is disingenuous: sure, you could, but no amount of antivirus can stop google from blocking customers or potential customers from seeing you without either of your informed, affirmative consent

No amount of Google will stop an antivirus from doing the same without your consent. What's your point? Anti-phish solutions must have the site owners' consent? Don't be ridiculous.

1 comments

based on your non-response to them, it sounds like you're conceding the following points:

- google could harm people less by providing recourse to the people they harm, but instead chooses not to;

- your suggestion that those harmed by google "just use another antivirus software" is irrelevant and doesn't apply here;

- market forces would not, in fact, be involved here;

- disabling Google's opt-out-only service is more than trivial for the average user; and

- google exploits this non-triviality by making the service opt-out, vs opt-in with informed consent.

> No amount of Google will stop an antivirus from doing the same without your consent.

I wish this didn't need to be explicitly specified, but "someone else could harm people" isn't a defense for google actively harming people

if that happened, and the antivirus company was in google's place, and they also failed to provide recourse to the people they were harming with their negative externalities, that would also be bad, just like it is now bad that google is actually doing it

so, what exactly is your point here in trying to justify google harming people via negative externalities while at the same time totally failing to offer proper recourse to them, when google has the option of harming people less, and chooses to avoid that option?

> I wish this didn't need to be explicitly specified, but "someone else could harm people" isn't a defense for you actively harming people

A statistical inevitability is a defense for something. The world doesn't have perfect things.

Stop trying to frame something bad just because it isn't perfect. If you manage to stop that, then it would be possible to have a constructive discussion.

> A statistical inevitability is a defense for something

no it isn't, and also being screwed over by the leading search provider isn't a statistical inevitably anyways

> Stop trying to frame something bad just because it isn't perfect. If you manage to stop that, then it would be possible to have a constructive discussion.

stop trying to justify the means with the ends, more specifically trying to justify google actively harming people (sorry to break the news to you, but harming people IS bad), just because they also happened to do a good thing, when they have the non-mutually-exclusive option to harm people less, and instead choose to avoid that option

if you manage to stop that, then it would be possible to have a constructive discussion about how google can harm people less, since currently it seems like you're okay with google actively harming people any amount less than or equal to the amount of "good" they claim to do (with the determination made by you personally, natch), even when they could choose not to

> no it isn't

If you think it's possible to be 100% accurate detecting phish then I've got a bridge to sell you.

if you think it's a statistical inevitability that every single website will eventually be screwed over by google, well, that's just weird given how much you've been defending google

even if that were true, it simply isn't a defense for google choosing to actively harm people: "google was going to screw over this site sooner or later, so you can't get mad at them for doing it now."

like, is that supposed to make google look better? It really doesn't.