• davel [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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    8 days ago

    I’d probably be paying for YouTube, if it were run by a normal media company instead of the world’s largest spy network and personal data broker. There’s no way in hell I’m giving them my credit card information.

    • Grapho@lemmy.ml
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      8 days ago

      Yeah I don’t really care about value when it comes to giving money to the guys who work with the NSA and CIA to find ways to more thoroughly spy on every user 24/7, and turned every search into “You asked for x, here’s a dozen pages of what the State Department thinks you should have searched for instead

      Not to mention their genocide profiteering: https://www.mintpressnews.com/project-nimbus-billion-google-amazon-partners-israel/280087/

    • BigDiction@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      Data gathering/brokering and payment information security are not really connected. PCI compliance standards are well standardized and fairly strict.

      I would trust Google to handle payment information securely over any ‘media’ company.

      If personal data was regulated at even the fraction of what payment data goes through we would all be better off.

      • comfy@lemmy.ml
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        8 days ago

        They quite literally don’t have my credit card information. What are you even trying to say here?

          • comfy@lemmy.ml
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            8 days ago

            I exaggerated for effect, in the way that 99% sure might as well be a fact in this case:

            I have never given them to YouTube, and they have no financial incentive to acquire them AFAIK - holding that kind of PI is a liability so if anything they wouldn’t want it without having a need for it. YouTube can’t even know what countries I live in, my digital identity from the POV of their servers is too fluid and non-unique for my viewing habits to meaningfully correlate; I blend in with many other people also trying to stay hidden from them.

            As for other Alphabet companies, like those engaged in surveillance capitalism who want to scoop up all of the datas, it’s theoretically possible they’ve illegally acquired them from third parties and found a use for it, but there’s just no feasible way they could associate that with most of my online activities, say, this account I’m using. The only people who have a chance at that are certain state intelligence agencies who are eavesdropping the wires, and they have much bigger problems they’re paid to worry about. Hell, unless things have gotten better for them since Snowden, even they might struggle - most of their super cool hacker shit is only really useful if someone’s worth active targeting.