| ▲ | em-bee an hour ago | |||||||
i believe that in the future technology will be so advanced that protection of privacy is impossible. the only way to counter that is education to respect peoples privacy and very harsh punishments for violations. i also believe that we will live in a post scarcity world, which means profit is no longer interesting, so any business case for invading your privacy will go away and therefore it will only happen for personal interest. the key in any case will be education, because without it abuse will be rampant and progress will halt because everyone is going to be suspicious of everyone else. | ||||||||
| ▲ | toofy an hour ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
> i believe that in the future technology will be so advanced that protection of privacy is impossible. the only way to counter that is… i’m not sure why so many of us have fallen into this… “there is no other future” thing… there are other options. plenty of them. there is no singular solution. we could always just say “no”. and that’s that. that would be one option. why do we feel like there is no other way? why are we afraid to say “nah”? | ||||||||
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| ▲ | api 21 minutes ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
I'd say I generally agree that the privacy problem has no techno-fix and must be solved by regulation. For example, we could extend HIPAA-style fines for leaked personal data to other forms of intimate data like location, biometrics, local documents, private chats, etc. Leak someone's location history? That'll be one $$$ fine per incident where an incident is one person data point. This at the very least converts this kind of data from an asset into a potential liability, incentivizing companies to not collect it, not hold it long, or thoroughly anonymize and aggregate it and then discard specifics. | ||||||||