▲ | rovr138 15 hours ago | |||||||
Not a false dichotomy. I'm just calling out the rhetorical gymnastics. You said you "don’t trust the big corporation" even if they go through independent audits and legal contracts. That’s skepticism. Now, you wave it off as if the audit itself is meaningless because a company did it. What would be valid then? A random Twitter thread? A hacker zine? You can be skeptical but you can't reject every form of verification. SOC 2 isn’t a pinky promise. It’s a compliance framework. This is especially required and needed when your clients are enterprise, legal, and government entities who will absolutely sue your ass off if something comes to light. So sure, keep your guard up. Just don’t pretend it’s irrational for other people to see a difference between "totally unchecked" and "audited under liability". If your position is "no trust unless I control the hardware," that’s fine. Go selfhost, roll your own LLM, and use that in your air-gapped world. | ||||||||
▲ | namaria 14 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
If anyone performing "rhetorical gymnastics" here is you. I've explained my position in very straightforward words. I have worked with big audit. I have an informed opinion on what I find trustworthy in that domain. This ain't it. There's no need to pretend I have said anything other than "personal data is not safe in the hand of corporations that profit from personal data". I don't feel compelled to respond any further to fallacies and attacks. | ||||||||
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