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Public service search engine as an escape from enshitification and tracking

Public service search engine as an escape from enshitification and tracking

cross-posted from: https://sopuli.xyz/post/10016343

89,004 local governments existed in the United States in 2012. By extension, there are a shit-ton of public sector websites including schools and libraries. So why can’t there be a public-funded search engine just for indexing all the public service websites?

Citizens who need to access a public service should not have to visit some shitty Google-like search engine by a surveillance advertiser to find a public resource. Google and Microsoft should not be gateways to public access. They can offer their shitty service for private sector searches but governments should have sovereignty from that. If I have to ask tech giants what is the URL for my secretary of state, it’s a fucked up dependency.

It also shouldn’t just be a search engine. There should also be a hierarchical structured directory. A public service directory plus search engine would be inherently ad-free and tracker free, federally funded.

Progress needed.

National emergency app now available in Belgium (exclusively to Google and Apple patrons who run closed-source software)

National emergency app now available in Belgium (exclusively to Google and Apple patrons who run closed-source software)

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There is always someone on standby to help you in need

https://web.archive.org/web/20231002102252/https://112.be/en

There is always someone on standby to help you in need

Doctor wanted to send me test results via e-mail (Microsoft!)

Doctor wanted to send me test results via e-mail (Microsoft!)

cross-posted from: https://links.hackliberty.org/post/1028406

The state of medical privacy has become quite appalling lately. I started using a young doctor in a new office and they are gung ho on modern tech. That’s fine to some extent but they want to send me invoices and all correspondence via e-mail. No PGP of course. I did an MX lookup on their vanity email address & it resolves to an MS Outlook server.

I asked them for my test results. They offered to email them.

My response: I do not want sensitive medical info coming by e-mail via Microsoft’s servers. I did not give you a copy of my email address for that reason. It needs to be snail-mailed to me.

Perhaps of greater concern is that the receptionist acted like I am making a unusual request, and that they do not mail things. Apparently I am the only patient who has a problem with sensitive medical info going to Microsoft. So the receptionist is investigating whether she can get approval to mail me my results by post.

I wonder if someone in that clinic will have to run out and buy stamps because I have a problem with Microsoft.

If boycotting Israel, include Microsoft in your boycott

If boycotting Israel, include Microsoft in your boycott

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Microsoft Slammed For Investment In Israeli Facial Recognition ‘Spying On Palestinians’

http://web.archive.org/web/20231204142210/https://www.forbes.com/sites/thomasbrewster/2019/08/01/microsoft-slammed-for-investing-in-israeli-facial-recognition-spying-on-palestinians/

Microsoft faces criticism for funding Israeli facial recognition company AnyVision, reportedly carrying out surveillance on Palestinians and working in Hong Kong and Russia.

Cutting off friends under surveillance capitalism (Google, MS)

Cutting off friends under surveillance capitalism (Google, MS)

cross-posted from: https://links.hackliberty.org/post/582272

I have lots of old friends who I only maintained sparse contact with. When I let my personal email address die (the address they would all have records of), I did not bother to update them with a new address.

They are all on the platform of some surveillance capitalist (e.g. Google or Microsoft). Google & Microsoft both refuse connections from self-hosted residential servers. And even if they didn’t, I am not willing to feed those surveillance advertisers who obviously don’t limit their surveillance to their users but also inherently everyone who makes contract with their users. I cannot support that or partake in pawning myself to subsidize someone else’s service.

I just wonder if anyone else has taken this step.

Tactic needed to counter all communities living on lemmy.world

Tactic needed to counter all communities living on lemmy.world

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/6251633

LemmyWorld is a terrible place for communities to exist. Rationale:

  • Lemmy World is centralized by disproportionately high user count
  • Lemmy World is centralized by #Cloudflare
  • Lemmy World is exclusive because Cloudflare is exclusive

It’s antithetical to the #decentralized #fediverse for one node to be positioned so centrally & revolting that it all happens on the network of a privacy-offender (CF). If #Lemmy World were to go down, a huge number of communities would go with it.

So what’s the solution? My individual action idea is to avoid posting an original thread to #LemmyWorld. I find a non-Cloudflare decentralized instance to post new threads. I create one if needed. Then I cross-post to the relevant Lemmy World community. This gets some exposure to my content while also tipping off readers of the LW community of alternative venues.

Better ideas? Would this work as a collective movement?

Apple's Privacy Faceplant: A Cautionary Tale for Closed-Source Giants

Apple's Privacy Faceplant: A Cautionary Tale for Closed-Source Giants

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Apple's Privacy Faceplant: A Cautionary Tale for Closed-Source Giants

https://escapebigtech.info/posts/mac-address-exposed/

Hello, Penguins! We will interrupt this week’s showcase friday to bring you a breaking news story. Apple just released an update to iOS 17 that fixes a bug that has been leaking users’ Wi-Fi MAC addresses for the past three years. This is a major privacy faceplant for Apple, and it’s a cautionary tale for all closed-source giants. The bug, reported under CVE-2023-42846 could have allowed attackers to track users’ movements by monitoring their Wi-Fi MAC addresses.

Showcase Friday #2: Purplix, end to end encrypted surveys

Showcase Friday #2: Purplix, end to end encrypted surveys

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Showcase Friday #2: Purplix, end to end encrypted surveys

https://escapebigtech.info/showcase/02/purplix/

Welcome back to Showcase Friday, my enlightened Penguins of the digital tundra! I present to you another hidden FOSS gem this week. This week, we’re diving into Purplix, the survey platform that gives Big Tech a proverbial wedgie by encrypting everything end-to-end! Yes, you read that right: everything. So don your tinfoil hats and let’s waddle into the cyber-iceberg. Ah, surveys. They usually suck the life out of privacy faster than a Hoover on steroids.

Showcase Friday #1: Nextcloud

Showcase Friday #1: Nextcloud

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Showcase Friday #1: Nextcloud, your own private cloud

https://escapebigtech.info/showcase/01/nextcloud/

Welcome to Showcase Friday, put down those fish and listen up. Today is no ordinary Friday—it’s Showcase Friday, the day we plunge headfirst into the icy waters of Free and Open-Source Software. Showcase Friday is a new series of articles where I’ll be showcasing a FOSS project that I think deserves more attention. I’ll be covering a wide range of projects, from the well-known to the obscure. The only criteria are that the project must be FOSS, freedom-respecting and privacy preserving, and it must be something I either personally use and enjoy or will use in the future.

The Audacity of Big Tech - The Irreparable Failures of Surveillance Capitalism

The Audacity of Big Tech - The Irreparable Failures of Surveillance Capitalism

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The Audacity of Big Tech - The Irreparable Failures of Surveillance Capitalism

https://escapebigtech.info/posts/the-audacity/

Recent events highlight the need for companies to continuously evaluate and improve how sensitive data is handled. Microsoft revealed that AI researchers had inadvertently exposed 38 terabytes of internal information since 2020. Additionally, Google agreed to pay settlements totaling $155 million over illigal location tracking practices. Microsoft’s Monumental Mistake Just last week, TechCrunch disclosed that Microsoft’s AI divisions casually allowed 38 terabytes of sensitive internal data to be exposed. Take a moment to grasp that—38 terabytes, and this from a company audacious enough to assure you that your data is secure in their hands.