In privacy, we talk a lot about how to protect our own data,
-
In privacy, we talk a lot about how to protect our own data,
But what about our responsibility to protect the data of others?
If you care about privacy rights, you must also care for the data of the people around you.
To make privacy work, we need to develop a culture that normalizes caring for everyone's data, not just our own.
https://www.privacyguides.org/articles/2025/03/10/the-privacy-of-others/
-
In privacy, we talk a lot about how to protect our own data,
But what about our responsibility to protect the data of others?
If you care about privacy rights, you must also care for the data of the people around you.
To make privacy work, we need to develop a culture that normalizes caring for everyone's data, not just our own.
https://www.privacyguides.org/articles/2025/03/10/the-privacy-of-others/
@Em0nM4stodon This is a pervasive issue because of the culture surrounding online privacy that has been carefully cultivated by The Powers That Be to make privacy feel taboo.
RE: the weird look I get when opening Tor.
-
In privacy, we talk a lot about how to protect our own data,
But what about our responsibility to protect the data of others?
If you care about privacy rights, you must also care for the data of the people around you.
To make privacy work, we need to develop a culture that normalizes caring for everyone's data, not just our own.
https://www.privacyguides.org/articles/2025/03/10/the-privacy-of-others/
RE: https://infosec.exchange/@Em0nM4stodon/116409501094179362
Half of the ideas about cool tech stuff that I've had in my head, I have not executed EXACTLY because of this, and it's pleasing to see that it is being actively talked about more!

@pitha is one of the projects that I am finding immense satisfaction in working with, since I am protecting not only mine, but everyone else's privacy too
-
In privacy, we talk a lot about how to protect our own data,
But what about our responsibility to protect the data of others?
If you care about privacy rights, you must also care for the data of the people around you.
To make privacy work, we need to develop a culture that normalizes caring for everyone's data, not just our own.
https://www.privacyguides.org/articles/2025/03/10/the-privacy-of-others/
@Em0nM4stodon should have been a thing when ancestry testing became popular. Giving your DNA sequence to a company means giving chunks of all your family's too.
How many people got everyone's consent for that..? -
In privacy, we talk a lot about how to protect our own data,
But what about our responsibility to protect the data of others?
If you care about privacy rights, you must also care for the data of the people around you.
To make privacy work, we need to develop a culture that normalizes caring for everyone's data, not just our own.
https://www.privacyguides.org/articles/2025/03/10/the-privacy-of-others/
@Em0nM4stodon
Very true. A prominent example: WhatsApp's tapping of entries in the phone book. None of the users ever asked me for permission. I don't want this and I don't use it myself, but nevertheless, Meta seems to know my contact details and they're updated with every new registration. That's beyond annoying! -
@Em0nM4stodon
Very true. A prominent example: WhatsApp's tapping of entries in the phone book. None of the users ever asked me for permission. I don't want this and I don't use it myself, but nevertheless, Meta seems to know my contact details and they're updated with every new registration. That's beyond annoying!@werawelt @Em0nM4stodon My mom had to download Whatsapp to talk to a neighbor about something, and it was the only way to reach them.
There goes the privacy of my phone number!
-
In privacy, we talk a lot about how to protect our own data,
But what about our responsibility to protect the data of others?
If you care about privacy rights, you must also care for the data of the people around you.
To make privacy work, we need to develop a culture that normalizes caring for everyone's data, not just our own.
https://www.privacyguides.org/articles/2025/03/10/the-privacy-of-others/
@Em0nM4stodon nodds in agreement
That's why we need to normalize using #Tor, #Monero and #cash.- Because oneself may not be in the crosshairs (yet),
- But that's not a guarantee nor rule of nature!
It's an act of #Solidarity to push for #privacy!
- Only fascists push the "Nothing to Hide!" - fallacy.
- Espechally when the same folks refuse to be transparent themselves…
- Because oneself may not be in the crosshairs (yet),
-
In privacy, we talk a lot about how to protect our own data,
But what about our responsibility to protect the data of others?
If you care about privacy rights, you must also care for the data of the people around you.
To make privacy work, we need to develop a culture that normalizes caring for everyone's data, not just our own.
https://www.privacyguides.org/articles/2025/03/10/the-privacy-of-others/
@Em0nM4stodon duh?
I'm not targeting that at you, but I'm shocked that people wouldn't.
(Not really. I'm sadly not surprised.)
-
In privacy, we talk a lot about how to protect our own data,
But what about our responsibility to protect the data of others?
If you care about privacy rights, you must also care for the data of the people around you.
To make privacy work, we need to develop a culture that normalizes caring for everyone's data, not just our own.
https://www.privacyguides.org/articles/2025/03/10/the-privacy-of-others/
boosting this so much







-
boosting this so much







-
J jwcph@helvede.net shared this topic
