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Comment by shadowgovt

6 years ago

This is why I consider the GDPR to be unrealistically broad in its definition of PII; it denies even innocuous feature-mode-distinguishing headers intended to allow for bug-identification of massively-distributed software installs.

If I'm given a forced choice between "more privacy" and "better software quality" I'm going to lean towards "better software quality."

Me too. Then a breach happens and someone with a straight face tells you: "we take your privacy very seriously", asking apologies, because the breach used some of your data to push some political campaign or to bother you with spam/extortions because that night you were watching some porn.

Programmers should stop pushing buggy or incomplete software as is, and start releasing software that works. Otherwise upper levels have an excuse to do all this "experience" telemetry, and we all are smart enough to see the consequences of a data breach.

  • > Programmers should stop pushing buggy or incomplete software as is, and start releasing software that works

    If you demand a perfection-of-function guarantee from something as complicated as a web browser, you'll never get a web browser with more features than the ones released in the '90s (and I'm not even sure we'd be that far along by now).

    If I'm given a forced choice between "more privacy" and "the software ever having the features I want to use" I'm also going to lean towards "the software ever having the features I want to use." And we know this is true for users in general because of the number of users who had Flash installed back-in-the-day in spite of the fact that it allowed a total bypass of the browser security model, because it had features that the browser lacked otherwise.

    • Instead of giving my privacy away, I prefer software like anything that you have installed from a CD-ROM back in the 90's and didn't needed a weekly update. Games, 3D-Studio, Autocad (to name a few) were more complex than a web-browser (a today's web-browser) and didn't needed a weekly update or the hunger for user-requested features, let alone dialing home because. The world worked relatively fine without the up-to-date wankery we see today.

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    • > you'll never get a web browser with more features than the ones released in the '90s

      I would actively prefer a web browser that lacks the features added since the '90s.

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> This is why I consider the GDPR to be unrealistically broad in its definition of PII

And I consider it far too narrow.

> If I'm given a forced choice between "more privacy" and "better software quality" I'm going to lean towards "better software quality."

Fair enough. I would go for "more privacy", personally. There is no technical reason why both of our preferences couldn't be honored.