privacy

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watson387, in Pharmacies Are Giving Your Medical Data To Police
@watson387@sopuli.xyz avatar

I take ADHD medication and the laws make you feel like a criminal for buying it.

joeldebruijn, in EU regulation and oculus quest

Also just to add: Using an Oculus Quest (at least without the “for business” variant) for work related use cases within EU poses risc for:

  • business continuity when used with fake Meta accounts to have a kiosk mode and rotate devices among personnel
  • GDPR because Meta doesnt sign proper DPA’s
possiblylinux127, in How To Configure DNS Over HTTPS and DNS Ad-Blocking on Windows and Android

Honestly if you use a Linux box there aren’t ads in the OS. On my Linux machine I just use Ublock origin and dns over https with quad9 as my provider

Oderus, in What's the best tool for discovering what your IP is when you are using TOR?
Cheradenine, in What's the best tool for discovering what your IP is when you are using TOR?
MagneticFusion, in Full PGP support in Skiff

Wow, what a great timing for me to switch from Tuta

Zorque, in [Discussion] How do you feel about age verification on Porn sites?

I think its the regulatory body's responsibility to provide a safe and secure service that can verify age requirements if they want to force that.

If they can't provide that service, they shouldn't require it, especially with such sensitive information.

vsis, in KeepassXC and KeepassDX Guide
@vsis@feddit.cl avatar

KeepassXC + Syncthing is my personal solution to keep my credentials and sensitive data across my devices.

xilliah, in Question about phones: Am I overreacting?

Well I’ve had a smartphone since 2012, just to try it. Honestly I don’t feel it has added quality to my life. Having specialized devices such as a camera, GPS, mp3 player and so on is actually more convenient and not more expensive. For example a GPS has a longer and more reliable battery life.

halm,
@halm@leminal.space avatar

2012 was 11 years ago, so out of curiosity: do you still have the same smartphone, and why are you still using one if it hasn’t improved your life?

Kbin_space_program,

Truth be told I have a Motorola Droid running Android 1 and if all you need is a phone with some email and sms texting it works fantastic. Even has a physical keyboard.

halm,
@halm@leminal.space avatar

I’m not even going to ask when the last security update came out 🤣

Kbin_space_program,

Lol, yeah that's an issue.

xilliah,

No at some point they become uselessly slow or won’t receive necessary updates. Like even some dumb chat app requires a ton of resources. And I’ve also had an iPhone that worked just fine until there was an update. After that it wasn’t practical to use any more and I switched back to android.

I’ve had 4. And I’ve used each one until it was completely useless.

I bought 2 of those 4 for my work. I do vr/ar and some clients require ar on the phone or tablet. And I needed one of them when I had an Airbnb, because you need the app for that. The again you can replace that with android running on a pi or sum.

BearOfaTime,

Lol, having separate devices is more convenient?

The smallest camera I can pocket weighs 5x my phone, is about 10x thicker.

GPS, same.

Mp3 player, about the same as my phone.

Computer/web browser? Well, nothing is as small as a phone.

I get all that in a single device with a phone weighing 8oz, measuring 6"x3"x3/8".

Separate devices is better if your use-cases for them have strong independence (e.g. Only use GPS in the car/on motorcycle, only use a camera when doing dedicated photo shoots, etc). If anything I’d say multiple devices is less convenient even then, it’s just that those devices work better for those use-cases, making the tradeoff of less convenient worthwhile. I’d much rather use a dedicated camera sometimes (and do), when I’m taking lots of pics and want to go faster.

But for most people, these activities are strongly related, and occur throughout their day. It would be far less convenient to carry multiple devices and have to pull them out and handle for these activities.

millie,

That depends on what you want out of them. If you want to minimize the amount of stuff you’re carrying around as your top priority, sure, phones are great. But if you want ease of use for a specific task without unwanted interference? They’re not always the best.

Like, if I were doing any sort of meaningful photography, I’d want my actual camera. It’s easier to shoot with, it allows for more control, and no notifications or phone calls are going to suddenly interrupt a shot.

When it comes to a music player, it’s mostly good, but what if I want to keep listening to music while doing other stuff on my phone, or while talking to someone? Phones are pretty bad at that sort of multitasking. There are certain websites I can’t read while listening to spotify, because something completely inaudible takes over the sound channel as soon as I load the page.

As to making phone calls? The number of dropped calls or calls with one-way audio is absolutely absurd, and not something I ever ran into on older dumb phones.

Convenience ultimately depends on use case. It is nice to always have some kind of camera on me, even if it’s kind of a half assed one. Ditto to a computer, a music player, and a phone. But they’re definitely not more convenient to use.

There’s a reason dials, macropads, tablets, midi devices, and things like that are popular. It’s usually a lot easier to control physical stuff sitting in front of you than it is to interface with some abstracted UI. Like, typing is so bad on phones that it spurred the creation of contemporary AI.

BearOfaTime, in why don't you guys scrobble?

Why should I?

nicerdicer, in Does it even make sense to care about privacy?

Here is a well-written summary of why it is important to keep things about you hidden to other entities.

No, you have something to hide

The text ist written is in Dutch. You can translate the website via Firefox to English.

frozen, in Google will no longer hold onto people's location data in Google Maps — meaning it can't turn that info over to the police
@frozen@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz avatar

Rare good guy Google?

harsh3466, in why don't you guys scrobble?

I just started scrobbling with Listenbrainz. I do it through an anonymous account, and the scrobbling comes through my self hosted music server.

I’m trying it out to see if I like the recommendations. If I do I’ll consider it a fair trade off in privacy for now.

Creddit, in Dr. Google will see you now

IBM did it first. It wasn’t a secret. There was a Watson Health group dedicated to training ML models on medical records from large insurers and hospital networks. Among other things, the game plan was to have the system provide oversight for the notes of physicians and other medical practitioners - to spot poor quality/repetitive notes and alert the practitioner and/or their boss to the risk of malpractice/inability to bill for the encounter.

Cyberjin, in Are there any good privacy friendly keyboards for android?

I tried most of them, it’s just not the same as Gboard.

Anyone know if you can block Gboard with DNS?

xarexyouxmadx,

Idk but you could always just install gboard & not give network permissions. You’ll lose a little functionality like the ability to add gifs from the keyboard which obviously need internet to search/load.

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