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Comment by hypfer

2 days ago

I am genuinely confused by this comment, given the intensity of disregard/ignorance/bad-faith.

I mean we had these before in other very similar topics regarding e.g. Snowden leaks but really a lot of things. So.. uh..

The wording is just so on the nose I'm refusing to believe that this was written in good faith by a real person. Good engagement bait tho.

> I am genuinely confused by this comment, given the intensity of disregard/ignorance/bad-faith.

I conversely am confused by the amount of knee-jerk reaction to the word "privacy" people here have.

> I mean we had these before in other very similar topics regarding e.g. Snowden leaks but really a lot of things. So.. uh..

Yes, exactly. Now consider that the world kept on spinning anyway, and the revelations from the aforementioned leaks turned out to have exactly zero impact on the vast majority of people.

To be clear: I'm not questioning the ethical importance of all that privacy talk, just practical importance. It's bad that we don't have more control and protection of our data by default, but at the same time, excepting few people and organizations, the impact is so small in practice that it's not worth the energy spent being so militant about it.

  • I understand that you have given up and trust me, I can see why one would do that.

    That is fine. You can do that.

    What is not fine however is discrediting the people that haven't given up as paranoid militant lunatics.

    You can be nihilistic, disillusioned, <other adjectives> all you want, but it is not okay to pull other people down and attack them just because they still believe in something you do not appear to be doing (anymore?)

    Apathy is okay. Sabotage is not