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by dwild 4734 days ago
The scary thing is that it's possible. Personally I don't care of what they collect because I don't fear the present government. However I fear that any big entities can do the same or that any malicious group could infiltrate the government to get access to these data (or collect more).

The fact that we consider our online privacy as granted is the scary part.

4 comments

There is a fundamental difference between expecting privacy on the Internet, and the government actively collecting all data on all people and compiling a massive database linking all of this data together.

No one should expect privacy. There are sketchy ISPs, sketchy mail providers, hosting providers, etc.

But a few hackers collecting email from a few individuals is not the same as a massive database that links everything in entire world in one nice package. A few random hackers in Russia do not have the political machinery or military machinery of the US government. They generally don't care that you're pro-gay rights (or whatever). They aren't going to try to punish you for your political views. They probably just want money or to defraud you in someway.

The US government, however, wants to control you.

> ...a massive database that links everything in entire world in one nice package.

Are you on facebook? Were you ever on facebook?

Since when could facebook crush dissent and political movements with military force?
Glad you saw my point. Unfortunate you chose to ignore it.
The US government, however, wants to control you.

[Citation needed]

I also fear that the availability of such extensive records on all citizens makes it more likely that an abusive government might come to power. I.e. what Snowden referred to as 'turnkey totalitarianism'.
The only reason you don't fear them is because you don't value your freedom enough.
> The fact that we consider our online privacy as granted is the scary part.

Ignorant, actually.

'Privacy on the internet' is an oxymoron.