• wuffah@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    We now live in an age where software controls the user, instead of the other way around. It is now an instrument of surveillance and control, instead of liberation.

    Age verification is a violation of the user’s rights of the highest order, and using “protecting children” as a justification is a disgusting and egregious hypocrisy.

    This is the end of digital privacy.

      • Prince Aster [He/They/Zir]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        18 hours ago

        Don’t really know what they’re talking about. Software has existed as an industry longer than it was a community. And the industry pushed back hard on the idea of software freedom in the early days.

        • _‌_反いじめ戦隊@ani.social
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          18 hours ago

          Precisely why I am questioning wuffah. I want know when, if ever, e experienced such a thing. Because from my recollection, software was always under the control of the seller.

      • WesternInfidels@feddit.online
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        17 hours ago

        Before the internet became de rigueur, more or less. So much of this kind of top-down-control culture has oozed into the PC world by showing up on phones – those always-on, internet-connected devices – first.

          • WesternInfidels@feddit.online
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            9 hours ago

            I don’t think the ownership of telecom was the important bit. It was the fact that, before 1996 or so, most PCs were not connected to the internet 100% of the time.

            The security implications of pervasive, persistent internet connections meant software vendors had genuine security reasons to push frequent updates. That situation, with vendors pushing constant changes in the name of security, wound up offering vendors a lot of influence they didn’t have before.

            This is exactly how, to choose just one familiar example, Microsoft is pushing users to have internet-validated Microsoft accounts, even to log in to their personal computers at home. “Want the security updates that come with Windows 11? You’ll have to let us watch you.” Which is just the way phones have been for longer.