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by TheSpiceIsLife 503 days ago
I’d go as far as to assume there’s no evading surveillance in a strict sense.

If you attend, leave your phone home (atypical usage), go with other people / meet them there / other people you know are there (facial recognition / gait analysis / clothing preference) those are all good data points to predict with high probability where you are and what you’re up to, especially given your typical movements, data usage patterns, purchasing habits, friends / acquaintances / social media interactions are all in at least a few databases.

Take the security measures you’re willing to make the tradeoffs for.

If history is anything to go by, we’re only ever an election, or other political churn, away from your particular sets of beliefs / identifiers being persecuted, or at least your least favourite political prisoners being released and coming after you.

And, as you allude to, relying on the security practices of others has its own problems. Even Perfect Forward Secrecy etc etc provides little help against Rubber Hose Cryptography.

1 comments

>If history is anything to go by, we’re only ever an election, or other political churn, away from your particular sets of beliefs / identifiers being persecuted, or at least your least favourite political prisoners being released and coming after you.

it goes other way around too - you are only one election cycle away to be pardoned.

And if the protest is succrssfull, you dont need a pardon anyway.

Source -- been to places, done the things, a special law shields me from the thiengs being brough up by autorities

Being pardoned doesn't help much if you're dead.

A special law shields you? How does a law shield you from persecution?

Over ten years later, I've never forgot this comment:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=6033481

>A special law shields you? How does a law shield you from persecution?

We won, this is how.

>Being pardoned doesn't help much if you're dead.

There is an escalation ladder you need to climb to attain martyrdom. It takes effort and courage and not everybody can or should do it. It's okay to be on the part of the process that provides moral support to the more hardcore participants.

It’s not clear to me what you’re getting at here.