Oh look, that thing they said definitely wasn’t happening was happening…

  • GuyDudeman@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    People think 1984 is about totalitarian government. It’s really about totalitarian capitalism.

      • GuyDudeman@lemmy.ml
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        2 years ago

        Oh thank you thank you thank you! Every time I post something like that on Reddit, I get a swarm of libs and right-wingers trying to get semantic on me to prove that capitalism isn’t just feudalism in disguise. Like, “But under Capitalism you can just change your employer! You couldn’t do that under feudalism!” and I am like - oh, so you’re saying it IS just like Feudalism, except we haven’t reached the “Every town is a Company Town” stage yet. Got it.

        • Tretiak@lemmy.ml
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          2 years ago

          Arguing with low-intellect, ‘meme’-intellectuals is never fun. But capitalism doesn’t ‘create’ the ‘inherent’ social friction and inequalities between people. Because almost ‘nowhere’ in human affairs, do you find people evenly represented. Even before you had capitalism, you still had the arrangements of ‘commerce’. Which were every bit as greedy and atavistic as the worst excesses of capitalism you find. And even before you had concepts like ‘property’, you had concepts like ‘territory’. I don’t like being a ‘rung’ on the ladder as much as anyone else, but I don’t think it’s a completely fair criticism of ‘capitalism’.

          • GuyDudeman@lemmy.ml
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            2 years ago

            I think what happens is that people don’t remember that we’re using “capitalism” as shorthand for “the current and all previous western economic systems”.

  • Cromutorium@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    In one case, an employee “viewed thousands of video recordings belonging to female users of Ring cameras that surveilled intimate spaces in their homes such as their bathrooms or bedrooms,” the FTC said.

    Of all the places, why the fuck would you install one of these in your bathroom? I just don’t get some people

    • Tretiak@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      Of all the places, why the fuck would you install one of these in your bathroom? I just don’t get some people

      The same kind of idiots that would put them in their home to begin with.

    • loki@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      Gotta keep an eye on the pristine toilet paper usage. It’s supposedly the first thing we’ll run out of in case of an disaster.

      Hasn’t 2020 taught you anything? /s

  • JuxtaposedJaguar@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    I’m shocked, shocked I tell you!

    I don’t understand how anyone still trusts any off-the-shelf smart device. Even the companies that explicitly promise not to do something have been found doing it.

    • dan1101@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      It’s so crazy to me that people will install spying devices in their homes that X number of random faraway people can access and they will PAY to do it. Even if everything is 100% honorable and well-run initially, most everything changes given enough time.

    • fishy 2.0 (he/him)@beehaw.org
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      2 years ago

      especially cameras inside their houses if you need a security cameras to monitor whats happening outside your house go pay someone to install them this way you control the access instead of trusting a 3rd party with info about when your home or not

    • orclev@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      Smart devices aren’t so much the issue as internet connected ones. I use a number of ZWave smart devices, but I avoid buying any smart device that connects with wifi. You do need some kind of hub device ultimately but even in that case you can use your own hardware and software for that.

      • schizanon@kbin.social
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        2 years ago

        Just run your own router and block all the outgoing connections you don’t want. I love my EufyCams, they work great and store video on premises. All I have to do is block the connections it makes to send video previews in push notifications.

    • Tretiak@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      I don’t understand how anyone still trusts any off-the-shelf smart device. Even the companies that explicitly promise not to do something have been found doing it.

      They ‘trust’ it for the same stupid reasons anyone trusts bad ideas, uncritically. They don’t think it’ll happen to ‘them’. Same reason people drunk drive. Same reason people smoke. Same reason people have unprotected sex. Same reason they do anything. It only ever exists as an abstract notion until the crosshairs visibly point in their own direction, and they suffer consequences as a result.

      I thought I took privacy seriously as a person that’s fairly conscious of it, until I turned my own, ‘advanced’, layman OSINT skills upon myself, and was shocked at what I was able to uncover. In detail; incidentally. And I was never prompted to do that, until I lost a job opportunity which involved an extremely ‘extensive’ background check, that included a ‘highly’ speculative interpretation of a few key events of my life, which were completely inconsequential.

      And most people will continue to behave the same way, until something similar forces them to revise their prior thoughts on it. It’s like thinking you’re going to defeat prostitution through moral lectures; and you won’t. Not until people experience loss or pain. Pain’s always a more instructive teacher for people, because pain always raises the question of ‘why’ it’s there. It forces you to think about how you ended up where you are. Unfortunately, most people are just blissfully ignorant.

    • ToastyWaffle@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      Because people are not properly educated on how our socioeconomic structures work, and fail to see the systemic issues with capitalism and it’s incentive structures and how they facilitate everything we always complain about. I love it when people complain about a bad CEO or company, yet fail to see how it’s just like cutting one head off of a hydra. It’ll grow back and it always does

    • dan1101@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      Either they know the potential problems and for some reason don’t care, or they are not aware of what they’re giving random strangers access to.

  • ryuko@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    Mentioned this in another Lemmy community, but a self hosted (preferably FOSS) home security video solution would probably have prevented something like this. Main problem is those solutions aren’t as simple as Ring’s plug and play cameras.

    • PeterPoopshit@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      I’m running esp32 cameras on zoneminder. They don’t make esp32 compatible cameras without the ir filter but I found one seller that sells them with only a little blop of superglue holding it together. The ir filter is also at the back where it can be carved out with a knife instead of at the front of the lense where it’s 100% impossible to remove. They probably get paid money by smart camera manufactures to not sell ir filter removable cameras.

      The night vision isn’t very good because the maximum exposure the camera can do isnt very high but it’s still a hell of a lot better than the conventional options of either 1)an affordable smartphone app based camera that spies on you or 2) a “proper” rtsp camera that can cost over $700 just for a non wireless non night vision one. I bought a ir led light bar to immuninate the fuck out of it which works well enough.

      Until they start doing a more effective job at cracking down on sellers selling ov2460 cameras that have an easily removable ir filter, this is the best option for now.

  • schizanon@kbin.social
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    2 years ago

    I need a sign for my security cameras that says something to the effect of “recordings are kept on premises and not made available to anyone outside this house” so my neighbors don’t think I’m a narc.

  • Parsnip8904@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    For others here who seem knowledgeable: my parents have a couple of TP-Link wireless cameras that let you see the video in their app. It doesn’t offer any security features like ring though. I don’t know if they’re smart cameras in the sense of ring.

    My previous understanding was that tplink was basically hosting their own servers to provide remote access to the cameras for their customers because it would be make people buy into the ecosystem.

    How much of similar concern exists for something like these?