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You are born as freedom. It is just that you have been conditioned to forget it.

File: f829316e44b16a1⋯.jpg (159.62 KB,1200x700,12:7,evil_google_JKI.jpg)

 No.15788

Time for Big Tech to learn about Karma!

Google misled consumers about the collection and use of location data

16 April 2021: The Federal Court has found that Google LLC and Google Australia Pty Ltd (together, Google) misled consumers about personal location data collected through Android mobile devices between January 2017 and December 2018, in a world-first enforcement action brought by the ACCC.

“This is an important victory for consumers, especially anyone concerned about their privacy online, as the Court’s decision sends a strong message to Google and others that big businesses must not mislead their customers,” ACCC Chair Rod Sims said.

“Today’s decision is an important step to make sure digital platforms are up front with consumers about what is happening with their data and what they can do to protect it.”

The Court ruled that when consumers created a new Google Account during the initial set-up process of their Android device, Google misrepresented that the ‘Location History’ setting was the only Google Account setting that affected whether Google collected, kept or used personally identifiable data about their location. In fact, another Google Account setting titled ‘Web & App Activity’ also enabled Google to collect, store and use personally identifiable location data when it was turned on, and that setting was turned on by default.

The Court also found that when consumers later accessed the ‘Location History’ setting on their Android device during the same time period to turn that setting off, they were also misled because Google did not inform them that by leaving the ‘Web & App Activity’ setting switched on, Google would continue to collect, store and use their personally identifiable location data.

Similarly, between 9 March 2017 and 29 November 2018, when consumers later accessed the ‘Web & App Activity’ setting on their Android device, they were misled because Google did not inform them that the setting was relevant to the collection of personal location data.

The Court also found that Google’s conduct was liable to mislead the public.

“We are extremely pleased with the outcome in this world-first case. Between January 2017 and December 2018, consumers were led to believe that ‘Location History’ was the only account setting that affected the collection of their personal location data, when that was simply not true,” Mr Sims said.

“Companies that collect information must explain their settings clearly and transparently so consumers are not misled. Consumers should not be kept in the dark when it comes to the collection of their personal location data.”

The Court dismissed the ACCC’s allegations about certain statements Google made about the methods by which consumers could prevent Google from collecting and using their location data, and the purposes for which personal location data was being used by Google.

The ACCC is seeking declarations, pecuniary penalties, publications orders, and compliance orders. This will be determined at a later date.

“In addition to penalties, we are seeking an order for Google to publish a notice to Australian consumers to better explain Google’s location data settings in the future. This will ensure that consumers can make informed choices about whether certain Google settings that personal collect location data should be enabled,” Mr Sims said.

Background:

Google LLC is a multinational company incorporated in the United States with its headquarters in Mountain View, California. It is a subsidiary of Alphabet Inc. Google Australia Pty Ltd is a subsidiary of Google LLC and conducts certain aspects of Google LLC’s business in Australia, including the distribution of Pixel phones.

The ACCC instituted proceedings against Google LLC and Google Australia Pty Ltd in October 2019.

If Android phone users want to stop Google collecting personally identifiable location information, they may do so by switching off the ‘Location’ setting in their Google Account as well as the ‘Web & App Activity’ setting. Consumers can delete personal data that Google has already collected about them through their Google Account.

____________________________
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 No.15789

>>15788

Forgot the link!

Google misled consumers about the collection and use of location data

https://www.accc.gov.au/media-release/google-misled-consumers-about-the-collection-and-use-of-location-data

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 No.15790

File: e5fbf57b2b3c795⋯.png (981.69 KB,1200x1124,300:281,Horses_Be_Like.png)

More Crazy Leftist Shit

Washington State bans gas cars by 2030 – the earliest in the US

https://electrek.co/2021/04/15/washington-state-bans-gas-cars-by-2030-the-earliest-in-the-us/

Washington State legislature has passed “Clean Cars 2030,” a bill setting a goal to require all light-duty vehicles of model year 2030 or later to be electric. The bill passed as part of a larger package directing utilities to prepare the state for all-electric transportation.

With this bill, Washington State becomes the first US state to pass a gas car ban legislatively (as opposed to by executive order), and now has the earliest gas car ban in the US. California and Massachusetts also plan gas car bans by 2035.

The bill, which we previously reported on when it moved out of committee, has now passed both houses of the state legislature and goes to Governor Jay Inslee’s (pictured) desk to be signed into law. It passed with a vote of 25-23 in the Senate and 54-43 in the House

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 No.15793

File: bbc1c86a5371b50⋯.png (136.47 KB,1108x1108,1:1,odysee_megaphone.png)

In other news…

HELP LBRY SAVE CRYPTO

https://helplbrysavecrypto.com/

> The SEC doesn’t understand blockchain. The claims made in SEC vs. LBRY would destroy the United States cryptocurrency industry.

< What’s the big deal?

> The entire blockchain industry is at risk in the United States. Big tech and Wall St. would have more power and many people could lose their jobs.

> The SEC is advancing an aggressive and disastrous new standard that would make almost all blockchain tokens securities.

> Classifying all actively-developed blockchain tokens as securities will be a bureaucratic nightmare for United States residents and businesses operating in the US.

> Under this new standard, almost any token is a security, including the previously safe Ethereum. The nature of technology is that it is never "finished".

> This change will make it much harder for startups to form new blockchain companies, cause massive job loss, and stunt the development of a critical new technology. All the while, big tech and Wall St. prosper!

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 No.15800

File: 7439c7122fdb135⋯.gif (125.86 KB,1200x407,1200:407,floc_4b.gif)

Google Is Testing Its Controversial New Ad Targeting Tech in Millions of Browsers. Here’s What We Know.

From: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2021/03/google-testing-its-controversial-new-ad-targeting-tech-millions-browsers-heres

Today, Google launched an “origin trial” of Federated Learning of Cohorts (aka FLoC), its experimental new technology for targeting ads. A switch has silently been flipped in millions of instances of Google Chrome: those browsers will begin sorting their users into groups based on behavior, then sharing group labels with third-party trackers and advertisers around the web. A random set of users have been selected for the trial.

Although Google announced this was coming, the company has been sparse with details about the trial until now.

EFF has already written that FLoC is a terrible idea. Google’s launch of this trial—without notice to the individuals who will be part of the test, much less their consent—is a concrete breach of user trust in service of a technology that should not exist.

FLoC is supposed to replace cookies. In the trial, it will supplement them.

Google designed FLoC to help advertisers target ads once third-party cookies go away. During the trial, trackers will be able to collect FLoC IDs in addition to third-party cookies.

That means all the trackers who currently monitor your behavior across a fraction of the web using cookies will now receive your FLoC cohort ID as well.

The trial will affect up to 5% of Chrome users worldwide.

As described above, a random portion of Chrome users will be enrolled in the trial without notice, much less consent.

Websites aren’t being asked to opt in, either.

FLoC calculates a label based on your browsing history.

Each user’s FLoC ID—the label that reflects their past week’s browsing history—will be available to any website or tracker who wants it.

Cohort IDs will expose lots of new information—around 15 bits—and will give fingerprinters a massive leg up.

Google will check to see if each user visited any sites that it considers part of a “sensitive category.” For example, WebMD might be labelled in the “medical” category, or PornHub in the “adult” category. If too many users in one cohort have visited a particular kind of “sensitive” site, Google will block that cohort. Any users that are part of “sensitive” cohorts will be placed into an “empty” cohort instead. Of course, trackers will still be able to see that said users are part of the “empty” cohort, revealing that they were originally classified as some kind of “sensitive.”

Regardless of how Google does it, this plan won't solve the bigger issues with FLoC, discrimination, and predatory targeting. The proposal rests on the assumption that people in “sensitive categories” will visit specific “sensitive” websites, and that people who aren’t in those groups will not visit said sites. But behavior correlates with demographics in unintuitive ways. It's highly likely that certain demographics are going to visit a different subset of the web than other demographics are, and that such behavior will not be captured by Google’s “sensitive sites” framing. For example, people with depression may exhibit similar browsing behaviors, but not necessarily via something as explicit and direct as, for example, visiting “depression.org.” Meanwhile, tracking companies are well-equipped to gather traffic from millions of users, link it to data about demographics or behavior, and decode which cohorts are linked to which sensitive traits. Google’s website-based system, as proposed, has no way of stopping that.

As we said before, “Google can choose to dismantle the old scaffolding for surveillance without replacing it with something new and uniquely harmful.” Google has failed to address the harms of FLoC, or even to convince us that they can be addressed. Instead, it's running a test that will share new data about millions of unsuspecting users. This is another step in the wrong direction.

Google is testing FLoC on Chrome users worldwide. Find out if you're one of them.

https://amifloced.org/

> .GIF related

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 No.15831

YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.

Just droppin' in some interdasting links:

https://www.mailvelope.com/en

Mailvelope is a browser add-on that you can use in Chrome, Edge and Firefox to securely encrypt your emails with PGP using webmail providers.

https://www.mailvelope.com/en/faq#mailer_list

-

So, I went on a hunt for secure email (secure email, lol!) providers with IMAP / SMTP in 2021.

Droppin' in a few links (lol!)

https://www.freenet.de/index.html

Which reminded me I wanted to check out how the Translator Engines were doing in 2021, so here's a couple more Interdasting Links:

https://www.deepl.com/home

https://www.deepl.com/translator

-

No list of email and domain name providers would be complete without Epik!

https://www.epik.com/

Wikipedia's article about them sucks, like it does about most things. Wew Lads!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epik_(company)

Of course there's always Yandex!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yandex

But if you're really serious, and have the coin, Njalla might be the way to go!

https://njal.la/

It's pretty much the most privacy-aware domain service I could find in 2021.

-

So yeah, if you have a Paid version of ProtonMail you can get IMAP / SMTP support if you run the ProtonMail Bridge…

ProtonMail Bridge: https://protonmail.com/bridge/thunderbird

Then you can use KMail or Thunderbird or Outlook to do your IMAP / SMTP shite:

IMAP, SMTP, and POP3 setup: https://protonmail.com/support/knowledge-base/imap-smtp-and-pop3-setup/

And, of course, you can use PGP (not that PGP is very secure, but if you use `gpg full-generate-key expert` you can at least generate an ED25519 key, which is more secure than an RSA 2049 or 4096 key; and let's face it, some folks still require GnuPG keys for some things!)

Here's a REVIEW of ProtonMail, btw:

https://restoreprivacy.com/email/reviews/protonmail/

And, if you are an idiot and use WordPress and GoogleCloud Platform (but also if you want to learn wtf is going on w/ ProtonMail Bridge and SMTP), then you might find some useful info here:

https://pychao.com/2018/10/14/use-protonmail-for-wordpress-servers-smtp-setting-on-google-cloud-platform/

-

My favorite in the way of both budget and security, however, is MailBox.org.

https://mailbox.org/en/

https://restoreprivacy.com/email/reviews/mailbox-org/

-

Disposable Emails?

https://restoreprivacy.com/email/temporary-disposable/

Secure and Private Email Services:

https://restoreprivacy.com/email/secure/

-

Back to PGP:

This article is excellent in describing the problems.

https://latacora.micro.blog/2019/07/16/the-pgp-problem.html

Some more Interdasting Links:

`Wormhole` https://github.com/magic-wormhole/magic-wormhole

`Age` https://github.com/FiloSottile/age

`libsodium` https://github.com/jedisct1/libsodium

`Signify` https://www.openbsd.org/papers/bsdcan-signify.html

-

This is a decent Leddit conversation RE: Opinions on Signal vs Element (matrix.org):

https://www.reddit.com/r/privacytoolsIO/comments/jqblhg/opinions_on_signal_vs_element_matrixorg/

https://www.slant.co/versus/1989/12764/~signal_vs_matrix

-

Don't forget Slack!

https://linuxhint.com/install_slack_arch_linux/

Don't forget https://snopyta.org/ either!

Or the Invidious Instances:

https://redirect.invidious.io/

Of course, getting an embed to work around here with invidious is a chore!

That's why EewwwToob embed related is an EewwwToob link.

-

And, for Johnny:

The Tao & the Tree of Life: Alchemical & Sexual Mysteries of the East & West

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/851538.The_Tao_the_Tree_of_Life

An interesting Discussion on Taoism and Kabbalah:

https://www.thedaobums.com/topic/41794-taoism-and-kabbalah/

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 No.15832

>>15831

I forgot some important links!

https://simplelogin.io/

Protect your privacy with email aliases

With email aliases , you can finally create a different identity for each website. Defend against spams, phishing and data breach. Open-source. Made and hosted in EU 🇪🇺

Easy Peasy to use:

https://app.simplelogin.io/auth/register

But yeah, EVERYBODY Should be using Email Aliases (if you use email at all!)

As far as E2EE (end-to-end-encrypted) communications nowadays?

Just use Matrix.

Signal will work, for now, for some. But Matrix is moving in the right directions.

-

This is also a good read:

How to Create an Anonymous Email Account

https://www.pcmag.com/news/how-to-create-an-anonymous-email-account

And this:

https://www.quora.com/How-do-I-make-a-Gmail-account-anonymously?share=1

And, of course, Leddit must weigh in:

https://www.reddit.com/r/privacy/comments/5la1ao/creating_an_anonymous_google_account/

As far as using Google Anonymously… (say you wanted to make annoying YouTube accounts or something!)

https://freedomhacker.net/easy-ways-to-remain-anonymous-using-google-5032/

Another link:

https://geekflare.com/create-anonymous-email/

Maybe CyberAtlantis might be Interdasting to you:

https://cyberatlantis.com/anonymous_email.php

-

And before I come in from another browser and post some `Fortunes`, here's a link to `Misfortune`:

https://github.com/mokus0/misfortune

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 No.15833

File: 6d76fcb84cbdf31⋯.mp4 (1.77 MB,640x360,16:9,sam_hyde_car_in_a_self_def….mp4)

>>15831

> Don't forget Slack!

https://slack.com/

Slack ain't bad; but you're right Matrix is better.

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 No.15835

https://archive.md/KDlb1

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/usps-running-covert-operations-program-spy-americans-social-media-posts-share-other

Another reason NEVER to post personal info or use a real IP on social media! Yes, they are even targeting alt media, nothing is safe these days. Use OPSEC. Proxies, forward secrecy, an alias, do not give them real info etc.

"There are so many other federal agencies that could do this, I don’t understand why the post office would be doing it. There is no need for the post office to do it — you’ve got FBI, Homeland Security and so on, so I don’t know why the post office is doing this," he added.

HERE IS WHY: I know how the spooks work and here is the real reason. The USPS has A LOT of other data those agencies don't have, or yet have, or cannot legally obtain without a warrant *backed* by solid evidence! So how is the US government going to get that kind of info? Ah, huge amounts of info from the USPS system! Fiscal info, purchases made to whom, names/addresses and *offline* associations…. *offline info* …. get it? Then if, say, someone were to buy an 'odd item', say it's 2x orders of 1,000 rounds of green tip 5.56mm or .308….. huh, let's look into that info, and check out some of that consumer's online history! Hey, they can't get that detail on the person from a social media post, right? Well now they know a Trump-supporting prepper on Telegram is buying ammo in bulk! So now they can make nefarious red lists of the targeted persons (Soviet style!) So THAT is why they do it. They're looking for more than just ammo by the way. They're looking for those buying bulk chicks from a hatchery, those buying bulk freeze-dried foods, those buying farming equipment at rapid speeds, etc. You know, the doomsday prepper types!!! Because, after all, OY VEY, how dare we live on our own and remain self-sufficient while they are trying to set up a feudalistic 'Great Reset' system! These kinds of people belong on hit lists when the economy goes under! THAT IS WHAT IT IS ABOUT.

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 No.16583

You mention a bunch of good, but all of this is "federated" at best.

How about mentioning/discussing some decentralized solutions, such as I2P, Freenet, Bitmessage, Jami, Jitsi, Tox, or even fucking Ricochet?

""Secure"" E-Mail and PGP-derivatives were tinkertoy old hat back in 2003, folks.

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 No.16678

File: de9b31bb67d8188⋯.png (28.77 KB,884x184,221:46,2021_08_11_nerd_dictation.png)

I have tried many free open source speech-to-text applications through the years, and will not even talk about any of the ones not meeting that definition; so yeah, no google; and I wanted an offline solution not requiring the internet or a web browser to operate. I like my privacy. Speech-to-Text Technology has slowly crawled forward in the open-source world, but the solution I am currently rolling with is `nerd-dictation`.

https://github.com/ideasman42/nerd-dictation

`nerd-dictation` is an offline speech-to-text utility for Desktop Linux that provides simple speech-to-text without being tied to a desktop environment, let alone the web. `nerd-dictation` is a simple single file python script with minimal dependencies, and it's hackable too! `nerd-dictation` uses the excellent `vosk-api`.

https://github.com/alphacep/vosk-api

It works in X (hence the `xdotool` dependency), so if you are in any kind of text editor or terminal after you tell it to `begin`, it will type out whatever is said, even if you switch to another editor or terminal mid-sentence! Yes, it works well on a Raspberry Pi, and can be used to give verbal commands to devices and applications.

In Kdenlive, to add subtitles, I was already using the `vosk-model-en-us-aspire-0.2` model, so I just pointed to where I store that with a soft-link inside the `~/.config/nerd-dictation/` directory I also made. You can try any of the models. I recommend that one for regular speech though. Phonefags may prefer a different speech model…

https://alphacephei.com/vosk/models

Anyway, it's worth playing around with. It's free and open source, it's offline, and it works pretty damn good, so…

There's trainable models too…

And, did I mention? It's really hackable.

ENJOY!

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 No.16679

File: 8a54f322b48004b⋯.png (11.19 KB,1200x600,2:1,MycroftLOGOUPDATE.png)

>>16678

I guess I forgot to mention Mycroft.

https://github.com/MycroftAI/mycroft-core

I have not personally tried it. Still looking into it, but I did detect some "Woke" Virtue Signaling upon first glance that instantly turned me off.

Besides, their main website, https://mycroft.ai/ does not like my VPN, which also turns me off. I'm sure I could find more to both like and also to turn me off, if I look more into it.

Anybody else have any open source offline Speech-to-Text experiences to share?

> inb4 Johnny reminds me I am in here talking to myself.

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 No.16680

>>16583

Thanks for contributing.

Weirdly, I had not heard of BitMessage before. Which led me to BitChan.

https://github.com/813492291816/BitChan

I mean, I am not opposed to tinkering with Docker, it looks pretty straightforward, and trying it out in a Whonix VM might be cool.

For those less technically advanced and those who want to take a quick look (without all the advanced features), there is now a (probably temporary) way of making BitChan easier to try. A BitChan public testing kiosk is currently up and running here: http://bitchan5zleliwr7egmn4yskth5k6ofu6qbax3y4t45k3k2plt363nad.onion/

BitMessage: https://wiki.bitmessage.org//

http://cryptojunky.com/2013/03/09/setting-up-and-using-bitmessage-an-encrypted-communications-platform-based-on-bitcoin/

There's also BitBoard (which BitChan is based on): https://github.com/michrob/bitboard

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