▲ | romanovcode 17 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
> Months later, the government arrested him. Their official reason? A minor, non-violent CFAA charge from an old workplace dispute that had nothing to do with Tor. This is exactly the argument for privacy to people who say "I have nothing to hide". Authoritative governments will always find a reason to dig something up and the less privacy you have the easier it will be. As a side note it sickening to see USA government doing this arrest straight out of gestapo/kgb playbook. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | 77pt77 17 hours ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Privacy is not a deterrent to that. The state does what it wants and in the end it doesn't even need an excuse. An excuse is a nice to have, but that's it. | |||||||||||||||||
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▲ | IlikeKitties 16 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> This is exactly the argument for privacy to people who say "I have nothing to hide" People who say this will not be swayed by any argument. What they are really saying is "I don't want to think about this". There's a truth I've come to accept in recent times: The vast majority of people are not able to extrapolate from their immediate personal situation. If they are not effected by something right now in a way they personally feel, they do not and will never care. Once you accept that fact, so many things make so much more sense in this world. The whole MAGA movement explains itself, the complete disregard of climate change or even local environmental issues make sense and the complete ignorance of privacy issues. The only way to sway these people is when they are personally affected. So consider this Truth the next time you find out a service has been collecting private information in an unsecured S3 Bucket. |