Ever thought, “Why should I care about online privacy? I have nothing to hide.” Read this https://www.socialcooling.com/

credit: [deleted] user on Reddit.

original link: https://old.reddit.com/r/privacy/comments/savz9u/i_have_nothing_to_hide_why_should_i_care_about/

u/magicmulder

The main issue isn’t that someone would be interested in you personally but that data mining may put you in categories you don’t want to be in. 99.9% correlation of your „likes“ and follows to those of terror suspects - whoops you’re a terror suspect yourself. You follow heavy metal bands and Harley Davidson? Whoops, you have a 98% likelihood of drinking and smoking, up goes your insurance rate. And so on.

u/Mayayana

Indeed. But most people here seem to have misunderstood your post. One of my favorite examples is from Eric Schmidt, chairman of Google, whoo said in an interview (on youtube) that if you think you have something to hide then maybe you shouldn’t be doing what you’re doing. (Like maybe the Jews on Kristallnacht shouldn’t have been living in their houses?) Schmidt was later reported to have got an apartment in NYC without a doorman, to avoid gossip about his promiscuous lifestyle. :)

u/SandboxedCapybara

I always thought the like “no bathroom door,” “no curtains,” or “no free speech” arguments always fell flat when talking about privacy. Sure, as people who already care about privacy they make sense, but for people who don’t they are just such hollow arguments. I think a better argument is real life issues that people always face. The fact that things like their home address, social security number, face, email, phone number, passwords, their emails and texts, etc could be out there for anyone to see soon or may already be is almost always more concerning for people. People trust companies. People don’t trust people.

u/Striking-Implement52

Another good read: https://thenewoil.org/why.html ‘I’ve Got Nothing to Hide’ and Other Misunderstandings of Privacy

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  • @socsa@lemmy.ml
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    101 year ago

    “Having something to hide” is a moving target. With good privacy practices it doesn’t matter what the definition of “something to hide” becomes.

  • @Rusticus@lemmy.world
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    111 year ago

    I’m more interested in privacy to prevent access to my data stream and PLANTING incriminating data. It’s a hell of a lot easier to frame someone when you have easy access to their devices.

    TL/DR; You may have nothing to hide but you’ve got plenty to protect.

  • @lockhart@lemmy.ml
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    91 year ago

    Whenever someone says: “I have nothing to hide”

    I say: “You’re not the one who decides that”

  • @SkyNTP@lemmy.ml
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    141 year ago

    TL;DR: without privacy you can (and will) be discriminated against, because that’s what people do and there is financial incentive to do so on-top of that.

    A basic examples being higher insurance premiums because of known factors that are out of your control.

    But it’s pervasive. Other people have already posted more thorough examples.

  • @captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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    81 year ago

    I hide not because I’m ashamed of how I live. I’m happy I live this way and believe it to be extremely ethical. Try telling my country folk though that it’s ethical for me to be transgender, gay, and polyamorous and you might start an argument. And however you live might wind up controversial too

  • @Fecundpossum@lemmy.world
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    211 year ago

    Thanks for the great share. I try to convince my loved ones of the value of even small, low effort ways to control their data slug trail. They don’t get it. Not even a little bit. And the vast majority of people won’t care until we’re all living in a black mirror episode.

    Are we already living in a black mirror episode? Fuck.

  • @dingdongitsabear@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    it’s a false dichotomy; the issue is not whether you do or don’t have something to hide, the issue is you choosing what you share and with whom.

    the fact that I don’t blast the quality of this morning’s stool accross all my social media outlets doesn’t mean that I’m hiding it, it means that I choose not to share it.

    that’s my decision and I don’t allow my hardware, software, service provider, government, or whoever-the-fuck to make it for me.

  • @RVMWSN@lemmy.ml
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    31 year ago

    I think the talk about personal privacy is obscuring the real issue. Power corrupts. Data is power. Big data is dangerous. If big tech abuses this power how could you fight it? Because they will notice any resistance and they can remove your visibility. It;s not about whether you personally have something to hide right now, it’s that no one will ever be able to hide anything anymore if we continue on this path, and I cannot for the life of me see how that does not end in totalitarianism eventually. I have nothing to hide, but that’s irrelevant.

  • @LegionElite@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    While most people are horrible judges of character and when even your own family throw you under the bus… and how a stranger can even cause you much trouble, I could care less about what others may think of me in a world where every lie has become truth and every truth is a mental illness of some kind.

    Been homeless most of my life, but I was different than most other homeless people. I had my fair share of problems but I made better choices than anyone else I met with the horrible plague of being homeless. I learned really quick that it doesn’t matter who or what you choose to be and it doesn’t matter how good of an attitude you have, how great or horrible you are… you’re still not important!

    So yeah, all this privacy garbage is just that… “GARBAGE” and the social credit score system can be whatever it wants but I’m not changing or running in fear, nor am I to worry any longer about a dying and broken down society with some bullshit pipe dream of being a better place one day. It’s not going to ever be better and it was never good in the beginning.

    I’ll die as a man of integrity before I take a knee to the enemy!

    • @floofloof@lemmy.ca
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      71 year ago

      Been homeless most of my life, but I was different than most other homeless people. I had my fair share of problems but I made better choices than anyone else I met with the horrible plague of being homeless.

      If that’s true, you’re exactly the kind of person who is likely to be mistreated as a result of profiling based on tracking your data. These algorithms don’t have room for exceptional cases, so you would be handled just like anyone else tagged as having been homeless. This could make it hard for you to get a home or credit or a job, among other things. It could trap a person in homelessness no matter what they do. That’s why people oppose this kind of surveillance.

  • scytale
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    1 year ago

    The statement about people trust corporations, not people is valid; that’s why I stopped using the “don’t have doors” and “let me see your phone” argument because people will think it’s different in that you personally know them, instead of some faceless corporation collecting your data.

    It got me thinking of a better example, and the one I came up with is baby monitors and home/door cctv cameras. A lot of companies providing those services lack any kind of security in that anyone can potentially see your camera live feed on the internet. Not that anyone’s watching, but someone could if they wanted. So if you’re not hiding anything, would you be fine that your baby monitor can potentially be used for whatever reason even though no one in your social circle can’t “see” it?

  • @frustbox@lemmy.ml
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    51 year ago

    Why you should care?

    Because the debate is not about whether or not you have something to hide.

    It’s about your right to consent. You should have the right to say no. And you should have the right to change your mind for any reason. You should have the right to regain control of who can store, access or process your data.

    Depending on where you live you may have such rights, or you may not. And the political debate is about granting, strengthening, weakening or revoking these rights. And you should care about having these rights, whether you use them or not.

  • @arvere@lemmy.ml
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    31 year ago

    their home address, social security number, face, email, phone number, passwords, their emails and texts, etc could be out there for anyone to see soon or may already be

    this part is important and few people talk about this. your data is indeed for faceless companies eyes only, but for now.

    you’d have to blindly trust all big datas’ security practices and that they won’t be leaked any time in the future, either by an inside agent or by a security vulnerability.

    once upon a time we did the same to our online accounts and used the same password over and over, only to find they were stored as plain text waiting to be leaked…

  • The Bard in GreenA
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    1 year ago

    One thing I’ve used to get really thoughtful responses out of people who “don’t care” is “Yeah, things may be fine now (they’re not) but what if some future fascist regime comes to power in 8 years? 12 years? All these records of your information will STILL exist.”

    3 things I learned from getting these reactions:

    1. These people (mostly) actually DO care. They just don’t think they can do anything about it / have the skills / time / energy to do anything about it / think they will lose access to the services they rely in if they take steps to protect themselves. So they justify not taking any action or changing their behavior and say they don’t care because it makes it easier to live with the toxic data harvesting they actually DO KNOW is going on and just don’t really want to think about too hard.

    2. On some level, they have decided to “pay the price” for convenient access to things like Facebook, Insta and Google Maps. They may not LIKE the pricetag, not really, but they’ve decided it’s worth it and because they don’t really like the price tag they embrace psychological tricks to avoid thinking about it, worrying about or stressing about it (like telling yourself and others “why do I care? I have nothing to hide.”)

    3. The most discouraging thing I learned from this is that, short of proof of immediate, existential danger from their existing usage patterns, they probably won’t change, even when you crack their defences with an angle they haven’t thought of. They’ve already decided there’s no escape for them and oh well, it’s worth it. They’ll stay there EVEN THOUGH they’re bothered by the same things you are.