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CIRCLE WITH A DOT

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  3. Can the AI haters give it a rest already?

Can the AI haters give it a rest already?

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  • Q quanin@allovertheplace.ca

    @JustinMac84 Everything is likely to cause harm, Justin. Literally everything. Getting in the car with someone is likely to cause harm, even with the regulations in place. Should we ban cars? A whole bunch of people were actually harmed when Covid hit. Should we ban social gatherings? Social media and AI have become today's rock and roll, being blamed for all of society's ills. But here's the thing. All of society's ills existed before social media and AI, and they'll exist after social media and AI are gone. At that point, we'll move on to blame something else for their existence.

    J This user is from outside of this forum
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    justinmac84@mastodon.social
    wrote last edited by
    #106

    @quanin I can invite you to my house for a cup of tea in the hope that you might want to come back. Or I can spike your tea with something addictive, put superglue on your chair or build a trapdoor that will make you fall down to my cellar. I think it's pretty obvious that only one of those options is appropriate.

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    • J justinmac84@mastodon.social

      @Meepercat @quanin If the other negatives of AI I have cited in this thread don't sway you, this article may be of interest as a succinct reply to your specific question. https://appleinsider.com/articles/26/03/03/what-privacy-as-expected-meta-ray-bans-are-a-privacy-disaster?utm_medium=social&utm_source=mastodon

      meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.meM This user is from outside of this forum
      meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.meM This user is from outside of this forum
      meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.me
      wrote last edited by
      #107

      @JustinMac84 @quanin News briefing: *Everything* is a fucking privacy disaster. Because our data can get stolen. From anywhere. The data your phone company has on you? Yeah. You think that's private? No, sorry. Your medical records? Health insurance info? That data can get stolen too. I'm not worried about my Meta glasses telling me there's... a bottle of Mountain Dew on my desk. Because anyone anywhere who knows anything about me? Knows that. So you, good sir, can take your scare tactics and your bullshit and shove them directly in your left auricular orifice.

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      • J justinmac84@mastodon.social

        @quanin I can invite you to my house for a cup of tea in the hope that you might want to come back. Or I can spike your tea with something addictive, put superglue on your chair or build a trapdoor that will make you fall down to my cellar. I think it's pretty obvious that only one of those options is appropriate.

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        quanin@allovertheplace.ca
        wrote last edited by
        #108

        @JustinMac84 The problem isn't that I might want to come back. The problem is when I won't leave. You don't have to trap me there in order for me to decide that I like it much better there. What's happening at my house that that's a viable option for me? No one wants to ask that question. So instead, they blame you for keeping me there.

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        • meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.meM meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.me

          @JustinMac84 @quanin News briefing: *Everything* is a fucking privacy disaster. Because our data can get stolen. From anywhere. The data your phone company has on you? Yeah. You think that's private? No, sorry. Your medical records? Health insurance info? That data can get stolen too. I'm not worried about my Meta glasses telling me there's... a bottle of Mountain Dew on my desk. Because anyone anywhere who knows anything about me? Knows that. So you, good sir, can take your scare tactics and your bullshit and shove them directly in your left auricular orifice.

          J This user is from outside of this forum
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          justinmac84@mastodon.social
          wrote last edited by
          #109

          @Meepercat @quanin um wow. there's really no need to be rude. I would argue that there's a difference between your data being stolen by an unauthorised bad actor and that bad actor being your service provider. The information is there. It's for you to do what you like with it. You asked a question. I gave my answer. If the answer doesn't concern you, that's absolutely fine. Keep your abuse for a respectful answer to yourself.

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          • J justinmac84@mastodon.social

            @Meepercat @quanin um wow. there's really no need to be rude. I would argue that there's a difference between your data being stolen by an unauthorised bad actor and that bad actor being your service provider. The information is there. It's for you to do what you like with it. You asked a question. I gave my answer. If the answer doesn't concern you, that's absolutely fine. Keep your abuse for a respectful answer to yourself.

            Q This user is from outside of this forum
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            quanin@allovertheplace.ca
            wrote last edited by
            #110

            @JustinMac84 @Meepercat I think her point is the bad actors are absolutely your service providers. I have 0 doubt my data is being sold, and I have even less doubt my phone company's the one selling it. But I need a phone company, so that's the baseline. But when that's the baseline, the rest is basically just Tuesday.

            meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.meM J 2 Replies Last reply
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            • Q quanin@allovertheplace.ca

              @JustinMac84 The problem isn't that I might want to come back. The problem is when I won't leave. You don't have to trap me there in order for me to decide that I like it much better there. What's happening at my house that that's a viable option for me? No one wants to ask that question. So instead, they blame you for keeping me there.

              J This user is from outside of this forum
              J This user is from outside of this forum
              justinmac84@mastodon.social
              wrote last edited by
              #111

              @quanin An absolutely valid point. If I've just invited you for tea and other normal behaviours and you prefer to be at my house than anywhere else, that is absolutely a problem that falls on the anywhere else. I agree completely and there is certainly much about society that needs fixing! If I manipulate you to stay though, I bear a share of the blame and so should suffer consequences for that unacceptable behaviour.

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              • Q quanin@allovertheplace.ca

                @JustinMac84 @Meepercat I think her point is the bad actors are absolutely your service providers. I have 0 doubt my data is being sold, and I have even less doubt my phone company's the one selling it. But I need a phone company, so that's the baseline. But when that's the baseline, the rest is basically just Tuesday.

                meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.meM This user is from outside of this forum
                meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.meM This user is from outside of this forum
                meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.me
                wrote last edited by
                #112

                @quanin @JustinMac84 Ex fucking xactly. The bad actors are everyfuckingwhere now. You can do nothing about it. Scaring people is useless. I need a service provider. To read my printed media. Why? Because having people do it for me isn't helpful. It's actually far less than helpful. The government ain't gonna give me my very own extra special helpy happy helper person to come read my mail for me. Why? Because I ain't entitled.

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                • Q quanin@allovertheplace.ca

                  @JustinMac84 @Meepercat I think her point is the bad actors are absolutely your service providers. I have 0 doubt my data is being sold, and I have even less doubt my phone company's the one selling it. But I need a phone company, so that's the baseline. But when that's the baseline, the rest is basically just Tuesday.

                  J This user is from outside of this forum
                  J This user is from outside of this forum
                  justinmac84@mastodon.social
                  wrote last edited by
                  #113

                  @quanin @Meepercat The particularly disturbing part of that article, though, is that it's not just data you chose to share being abused, your device is collecting data from you and doing God knows what with it without being asked. I think this is unacceptable and would push back by all possible means against such practices. Judging by her extreme reaction, perhaps that makes me weird, who knows?

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                  • J justinmac84@mastodon.social

                    @quanin An absolutely valid point. If I've just invited you for tea and other normal behaviours and you prefer to be at my house than anywhere else, that is absolutely a problem that falls on the anywhere else. I agree completely and there is certainly much about society that needs fixing! If I manipulate you to stay though, I bear a share of the blame and so should suffer consequences for that unacceptable behaviour.

                    Q This user is from outside of this forum
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                    quanin@allovertheplace.ca
                    wrote last edited by
                    #114

                    @JustinMac84 The problem is, prove it. Mastodon has no algorithm, but can be just as addictive as Facebook is if someone wants it to be. Arguably you and I are wasting a disproportionate amount of time on the platform right now without being addicted. So how do you separate "these people were addicted to Facebook, or TikTok, or Mastodon, or whatever" from "these people are living in a 2026 world and that's rough"? Most people don't want to separate the two. Johny spent all his time on Facebook, Johny hurt himself, therefore, Facebook made him. No, perhaps his mental health having been shit since Covid made him and Facebook delayed it. You do not know.

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                    • J justinmac84@mastodon.social

                      @quanin @Meepercat The particularly disturbing part of that article, though, is that it's not just data you chose to share being abused, your device is collecting data from you and doing God knows what with it without being asked. I think this is unacceptable and would push back by all possible means against such practices. Judging by her extreme reaction, perhaps that makes me weird, who knows?

                      Q This user is from outside of this forum
                      Q This user is from outside of this forum
                      quanin@allovertheplace.ca
                      wrote last edited by
                      #115

                      @JustinMac84 @Meepercat Like I said. Basically Tuesday. You don't even need a Facebook account for Meta to track you. It's everywhere now. Getting hot and bothered about one component of that everywhere is not very productive.

                      meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.meM J 2 Replies Last reply
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                      • Q quanin@allovertheplace.ca

                        @JustinMac84 @Meepercat Like I said. Basically Tuesday. You don't even need a Facebook account for Meta to track you. It's everywhere now. Getting hot and bothered about one component of that everywhere is not very productive.

                        meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.meM This user is from outside of this forum
                        meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.meM This user is from outside of this forum
                        meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.me
                        wrote last edited by
                        #116

                        @quanin @JustinMac84 Exactly. It's Tuesday. Everything tracks our everywhere. My phone probably knows when I'm taking a poop because I'm reading the news.

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                        • meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.meM meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.me

                          @quanin @JustinMac84 Ex fucking xactly. The bad actors are everyfuckingwhere now. You can do nothing about it. Scaring people is useless. I need a service provider. To read my printed media. Why? Because having people do it for me isn't helpful. It's actually far less than helpful. The government ain't gonna give me my very own extra special helpy happy helper person to come read my mail for me. Why? Because I ain't entitled.

                          J This user is from outside of this forum
                          J This user is from outside of this forum
                          justinmac84@mastodon.social
                          wrote last edited by
                          #117

                          @Meepercat @quanin I would say that rolling over and accepting that is like being in an abusive relationship. That's what the GDPR is about. That's what the Digital Markets Bill or whatever it's called is about. For me, accepting that privacy has ceased to exist and I might as well accept it is the ultimate, distopian defeat. Personally, however ineffectual, I just won't do that. I respect others' helpless feelings though.

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                          • meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.meM meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.me

                            @quanin @JustinMac84 Ex fucking xactly. The bad actors are everyfuckingwhere now. You can do nothing about it. Scaring people is useless. I need a service provider. To read my printed media. Why? Because having people do it for me isn't helpful. It's actually far less than helpful. The government ain't gonna give me my very own extra special helpy happy helper person to come read my mail for me. Why? Because I ain't entitled.

                            J This user is from outside of this forum
                            J This user is from outside of this forum
                            justinmac84@mastodon.social
                            wrote last edited by
                            #118

                            @Meepercat @quanin People are trying to push back with those bills and laws. I believe we have to make our voices heard, to curb the use of technologies that abuse us, otherwise we give up all freedoms. I just can't do that. I respect those that feel they have no choice, but would encourage them that isn't the case and to assert themselves against their abusers.

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                            • Q quanin@allovertheplace.ca

                              @JustinMac84 @Meepercat Like I said. Basically Tuesday. You don't even need a Facebook account for Meta to track you. It's everywhere now. Getting hot and bothered about one component of that everywhere is not very productive.

                              J This user is from outside of this forum
                              J This user is from outside of this forum
                              justinmac84@mastodon.social
                              wrote last edited by
                              #119

                              @quanin @Meepercat Change won't happen overnight. You can't push back against everything all at once, though goodness knows I try. But you can push back against the latest incursions. You can raise awareness and hope that others will push back too. Some will, most won't. That's how it goes. Hopefully the little pushes will add up to something, maybe they won't. Bottom line is, I'd rather do something than nothing.

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                              • J justinmac84@mastodon.social

                                @Meepercat @quanin I would say that rolling over and accepting that is like being in an abusive relationship. That's what the GDPR is about. That's what the Digital Markets Bill or whatever it's called is about. For me, accepting that privacy has ceased to exist and I might as well accept it is the ultimate, distopian defeat. Personally, however ineffectual, I just won't do that. I respect others' helpless feelings though.

                                Q This user is from outside of this forum
                                Q This user is from outside of this forum
                                quanin@allovertheplace.ca
                                wrote last edited by
                                #120

                                @JustinMac84 @Meepercat Having been on the other side of many of those GDPR conversations thanks to the people who paid me, that's not a solution. Sure, it makes people feel better, but there are so many legal exemptions that mean companies can still hold onto your data for an extended period despite you being asked to be forgotten. For example, the company I worked for at the time, a GDPR request meant we were absolutely required to delete your web content, your user account, any pictures of you that you posted to the site, etc. But we could hold onto your conversation history with us, your financial information, and a few other pieces of information that I can't think of right now because that was nearly two years ago. But hey, they got to ask to be forgotten, so they won, right? No.

                                meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.meM 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • Q quanin@allovertheplace.ca

                                  @JustinMac84 The problem is, prove it. Mastodon has no algorithm, but can be just as addictive as Facebook is if someone wants it to be. Arguably you and I are wasting a disproportionate amount of time on the platform right now without being addicted. So how do you separate "these people were addicted to Facebook, or TikTok, or Mastodon, or whatever" from "these people are living in a 2026 world and that's rough"? Most people don't want to separate the two. Johny spent all his time on Facebook, Johny hurt himself, therefore, Facebook made him. No, perhaps his mental health having been shit since Covid made him and Facebook delayed it. You do not know.

                                  J This user is from outside of this forum
                                  J This user is from outside of this forum
                                  justinmac84@mastodon.social
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #121

                                  @quanin I would argue that my time spent talking to you hasn't been a waste. That was a valuable article you sent me, from which I feel I have learned something. I have found the very activity of respectful disagreement rewarding, since I find it so rare on social media. It's nice not wholy to agree with someone and yet for no-one to resort to hate. That, in itself, to me, is a net win.

                                  Q 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • J justinmac84@mastodon.social

                                    @quanin @Meepercat Change won't happen overnight. You can't push back against everything all at once, though goodness knows I try. But you can push back against the latest incursions. You can raise awareness and hope that others will push back too. Some will, most won't. That's how it goes. Hopefully the little pushes will add up to something, maybe they won't. Bottom line is, I'd rather do something than nothing.

                                    Q This user is from outside of this forum
                                    Q This user is from outside of this forum
                                    quanin@allovertheplace.ca
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #122

                                    @JustinMac84 @Meepercat I would respectfully submit that that might very well be your addiction, my friend.

                                    J 1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • Q quanin@allovertheplace.ca

                                      @JustinMac84 @Meepercat Having been on the other side of many of those GDPR conversations thanks to the people who paid me, that's not a solution. Sure, it makes people feel better, but there are so many legal exemptions that mean companies can still hold onto your data for an extended period despite you being asked to be forgotten. For example, the company I worked for at the time, a GDPR request meant we were absolutely required to delete your web content, your user account, any pictures of you that you posted to the site, etc. But we could hold onto your conversation history with us, your financial information, and a few other pieces of information that I can't think of right now because that was nearly two years ago. But hey, they got to ask to be forgotten, so they won, right? No.

                                      meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.meM This user is from outside of this forum
                                      meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.meM This user is from outside of this forum
                                      meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.me
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #123

                                      @quanin @JustinMac84 To compare that to an abusive relationship is... a piss poor comparison to say the least. Yes, I know my privacy is being violated, but am I going to make my life more difficult by asking my *real* abusers to do more for me that they don't want to do? Please, put that one in your pipe and smoke it, for a good, long, while.

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                                      • Q quanin@allovertheplace.ca

                                        @JustinMac84 @Meepercat I would respectfully submit that that might very well be your addiction, my friend.

                                        J This user is from outside of this forum
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                                        justinmac84@mastodon.social
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #124

                                        @quanin @Meepercat An interesting point of view. Not sure how tongue in cheek you're being. I want to be free. I want not to be abused. I want to suffer as little abuse as possible, for that to be the case for all of us. If that is an addiction and, honestly, I don't accept that, since I define addiction as something that harms you, so be it.

                                        meepercat@mastodon.stickbear.meM Q 2 Replies Last reply
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                                        • J justinmac84@mastodon.social

                                          @quanin I would argue that my time spent talking to you hasn't been a waste. That was a valuable article you sent me, from which I feel I have learned something. I have found the very activity of respectful disagreement rewarding, since I find it so rare on social media. It's nice not wholy to agree with someone and yet for no-one to resort to hate. That, in itself, to me, is a net win.

                                          Q This user is from outside of this forum
                                          Q This user is from outside of this forum
                                          quanin@allovertheplace.ca
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #125

                                          @JustinMac84 I mean, this was a conversation that didn't need to happen, and only happened because you had an argument to make. I'm glad you learned something, but honestly, I stopped caring about this thread when I went to bed last night.

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