| > Source code in all cases would be a good start. Not all corporations provide all source code to everything. If you don't trust any of them, that's one thing. If you specifically select Google for your ire, I say that's irrational. > Earning a good reputation over time would be the real way. I think they're the most valuable corporation I've ever interacted with. I also trust their employees' competence and desire to protect my privacy more than any other company. > The fact that it is harder for Google to regain reputation is their problem, not mine. We're not talking about their reputation. We're talking about your opinion of them, and whether it has a rational basis. > Gmail. google-analytics. Chromebook, Android... I understand the data Google collects, how it protects my data, and how it does business... I approve. You want to talk about disapproval? Target. Anthem BCBS. Sony. > Projection and/or lies. See above. The only example you've given is to release all of their source code. That's not a reasonable expectation. > Using someone's record as a heuristic about their future behavior isn't based on reason? Do you also get angry with people who stop going to a particular store after being ripped off or sold a lemon? If you're citing GMail, Google Analytics, Chromebook, and Android as examples of BAD behavior on Google's part, then yes, I think you're reading their past behavior entirely wrong. I said it before, and I'll say it again - you don't like the value proposition of their products. That's fine. You seem to think others are crazy for making the informed and conscious choice to use them. Would I be crazy to hire a personal secretary who can read all of my mail and emails, and make suggestions to me about which products I might enjoy? |
While I question how "informed" those choices are, that wasn't my argument. I'm suggesting you're crazy for disregarding the pattern in Google's past behavior, that says that just like all their other products, they will eventually use it as a tool for mass collection of personal data ("spying"). To argue that this is not their intention is to ignore the years of public statements Google has made about how they operate.
If you want to use Google products anyway, that's your choice. Your opinion that they make useful products and services (they do) is entirely off topic. I was replying to the "...but that doesn't mean that's what they do.", which is about Google's behavior regarding spying on and recording personal information. Their past behavior says "that's what they do", even if the first version doesn't implement that part yet.
This is entirely about the reputation that Google - and only Google - has earned for themselves. BCBS and Target get to earn their on reputations, which is also off topic.
Anyway, I have better things to do than argue with trolls and/or fawning fans of spyware.