| > Most of the apps in discussion see little to no use and go dead soon after launch That's not convincing. Of the apps that do get used, the vibe-coded ones will likely be unsafe. > If a user is confident enough about a no name company that they give them enough info to make identity theft a possibility That's completely unrelated. You can give a company very little information. Any of it being leaked is unacceptable. You can find a lot from an email, or a phone number. People are taught, by CNBC, by suits, by hacks, that you can trust the apps on your commercials and it will be fine. It likely won't be, and your response is exactly why. Many of you are apathetic to the idea of doing right by people. So people are manipulated, and some of them are elderly and don't even understand how computers work. This is reason enough to care about what they are exposed to, not say "let's burn it all down with shitty vibe-coding because users are dumb anyway." We're supposed to be better than this. |
What's the threat though. As in, what's at risk. A leaked email address? Probably. Enough info to have your identity stolen as prior commenter had mentioned. Probably not.
> That's completely unrelated.
Umm, no, it's related due to the prior commenter claiming that was the risk in their contrived situation from prior post mentioning identity theft.
> Any of it being leaked is unacceptable. You can find a lot from an email, or a phone number.
Everyone's email has already been leaked somewhere. It's not private data. This is like saying your bank account number is confidential financial information and ignoring the fact it's printed on every check you write.
> Many of you are apathetic to the idea of doing right by people.
> We're supposed to be better than this.
I object by simply saying I'm just being realistic. Data leaks somewhere, everywhere, sometimes, always. You're choosing to live in a fantasy land where this doesn't happen as if it wasn't the very true state of the world long before vibe coding came along. Sure, it's not my ideal state. But it is the actual state of things. Get real.