• rdyoung@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    I think you misread me.

    I never thought that these modes were protecting me from anything except those who shared the same pc. Apparently I am the only one who understands the way the internet works and that nothing you do or any software you run on your system can stop every website and server you interact with or that passes on your data packets to the next server from logging everything it can about you.

    How do people think that sites like reddit cross check and correlate data from users to find those with multiple accounts that are attempting to evade bans? There is so much data that we don’t even know we are creating.

    I’m all for privacy and anonymity when and where it makes sense but it seems like people here have no idea what the difference between the two are and just how difficult it is and how much extra friction it brings to attempt to be completely anonymous and private via a system designed to connect people.

    • dannoffs@lemmy.sdf.org
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      6 months ago

      I’m seeing a lot of people make arguments like this and I just don’t get it. Is your point that its okay for tech companies to prey on the ignorance of nontechnical users? We can’t expect everyone to know everything about every service they interact with.

      • BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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        6 months ago

        Where did rdyoung say any of this?

        What you just did was put words in his mouth;make a straw man.

        And factually, browsers explain what their respective private/incognito modes do. People assumed they did something else.

        Did these corporations take advantage of that? Yes.

        In the end, these users are as much to blame for using a tool and assuming how it functioned.