"I don't need to protect my privacy because they already know everything about me" is a form of privacy nihilism. You still have plenty of privacy worth protecting
The Framers detested dragnet searches and preventing dragnets was the cornerstone of the Fourth Amendment. Data mining threatens to bring back the dragnet search in digital form.
All the information is held by private companies and the gov’t gets the info from them voluntarily.
Ditto for the First Amendment. Worthless. Instead of the govt prohibiting speech, the govt just has private companies do it for them.
How many times a week on HackerNews do you see this kind of exchange:
A: Facebook censored this or that and thus infringes on free speech.
B: It’s a private company; it can do what it wants.
A: But, but, there’s something wrong with that!
B: Don’t like it, make your own Facebook. Hur dur...
Etc.
Ad nauseum.
Clearly, both (A) and (B) above are trying to reason through something within an outdated and outmoded framework; it’s why both sides sound silly.
Anyway, this is the same thing... but with the 4th amendment.
Same problem.
A private company that holds your data can do with it what it wishes. And, like the first amendment, if the govt makes it clear to these private companies that they ought ‘voluntarily’ cooperate with the govt “if they know what’s good for them,” then then Bill of Rights is worthless.
The 1st and 4th were meant to protect us from a tyrannical govt; not a tyrannical corporation.
Scrap the entire ball of wax and start over.
The Constitution — at this point — is an utter joke.
The constitution has functioned as intended. Its blindingly obvious to anyone that the biggest concern of the founders were to limit and reduce tyrannical governments and corrupt church hierarchies. It's arguable if we've succeeded yet, but given recent examples elsewhere that resulted in millions upon millions dead, I'd say we are on the better side of that one.
Businesses on the scale of a Facebook or a Google or Walmart simply did not exist anywhere, at any point in time in human history up to that point. But they rightly left these matters to the civil authorities, and the governed.
So no, the Constitution is not an utter joke. Our politicians and our indolent populace are.
The Founding Fathers sought to “limit and reduce corrupt church hierarchies”?
That’s not blindingly obvious.
I believe a typical Founding Father would shudder at the thought of the government having anything whatsoever to say about the manner in which a church administered itself.
The point is to not have the entity that has the monopoly on violence - being able to arrest, detain, and perhaps kill you legally - also have the right to silence you or prevent all sorts of other activities that would make it easier for them to arrest, detain, and kill you whenever they feel like it.
Public and private point fingers at each other in public.
But in private they are all part of the same machine. But still if we keep shouting freedom we might convince our self we are free.
HN Googlebot:
<see story about Google>
<ctrl-F for main thrust of story X>
So a dark trick to get people to X to feed the surveillance/ads/guillotine/CIA/NSA/CCP/Vladimir Putin machine?
That's some creepy shit for fools without appreciation for privacy (who will later call on their government to prevent Google from rightfully using data they willingly provided).
I just spent the weekend re-reading Virtual Light & Idoru, Gibson's Bridge series, and I think both books mentioned this theory that the most effective way to ask if anyone's seen a person is to try to identify what celebrity a person looks like, & go around asking if anyone had seen a John Malkovich looking dude around the area, or who-have-you. Both books mention that there is a part of the brain literally trained on looking for/at celebrities, special purpose function for it, and declaring that it's the most likely system to register for most people, our common node/vibration where we'll find matches.
Kind of getting a weird celebrity-recognition-part-of-the-brain vibe of that off this story? Except it's AI's dreaming instead of human people?
Pre-pandemic, my wife and I would sometimes play a game at events with large numbers of people we didn't know, where one of us would mention a celebrity lookalike and the other had to spot them in the crowd.
Conceptually, this is rather like lossy compression with a shared dictionary. In practice your likeness has still been trasmitted. Jpeg files are after all just numbers too, merely less specialized.
I find more value in the historical doppelganger than free email. FAANG should come up with more parlor tricks for my data, instead of boring office products lol.
The best it could find came back at only 61%. I like the virtual tours on the app but I would like (maybe someone has done this already?) an AR app/option where when you are in a place like the Acropolis you hold it up and it shows you what it looked like in its heyday.
I assume this is more of Google not wanting to put the effort into researching and complying with the law for a one-off arts and culture project, sort of like how the website for Mom & Pops deli in upstate NY started banning European visitors because of fear/misunderstanding of the GDPR.
Sorry for the rant but Google has time and money to build things like this and yet they don't have customer support for people whose account got suspended for no reason?
Though Google is merely a storefront en payment intermediary of what the banned user bought (apps and movies), it could be argued the client of google per se is the companies selling the product, they're the one paying Google a share of their sales.
Not that I disagree with you here just making the argument.
Like parent said, I found that google has decent customer service once you clearly become their client (which I have been on adwords, analytics and on gsuite).
Not the parent poster, but I'll take a stab at this.
I'd wager that the parent poster doesn't have any sort of direct relationship with the local pet shelter: there's no contract, or handshake agreements, nothing like that.
The lack of a relationship is key.
Google provides services to a large number of people, and while they don't charge (most) consumers directly for those services in dollar-units, Google's user base does pay via other means: nominally by being on the receiving end of hyper-targeted ads.
There's a relationship there. Google provides a service, in exchange for psychological capital, which Google then translates into cashflow via advertisers.
Relationships, good ones at least, require trust. And the fact that I know that there is a server inside of Google which will mercilessly nuke my account from orbit without warning... isn't exactly trust-inspiring.
Moreover, I know that if that does happen, I have effectively zero options to resolve the problem. I'm screwed.
Google could choose to fix this problem, and to invest their rather substantial resources in building trust. But they don't, and instead kick out toy apps like the above. This sends a very strong message to people like the parent poster, in that Google doesn't really value them or their well-being.
Now, Google isn't required to be trustworthy. Plenty of organizations aren't. But there's nothing wrong with customers calling that out and demanding more when they feel Google isn't allocating its resources in their best interests. It's also completely within Google's purview to utterly ignore them.
That's the difference: in one case, there's an established relationship, and that comes with certain expectations. In the other, not so much.
I feel like in your attempt, you lost sight of the fact that this project has no relation with customer support at google, other than originating from Google.
Lots of things originate from google. You can say the exact same thing of all of them. In fact you can plain and simply say "Google has time to do ANYTHING, yet it doesn't have time to provide customer support for that very thing?"
There's a point to be made that Google should be providing support. Do you think this, specifically, is what they should cut for it?
Prima facie this comment enraged me, but on reflection it has a deep point; both parties here are just acting out of rational self interest. Google has decided that their bottom line won't suffer if they tell locked-out customers to get fucked. They would rather use the money on cheeky bets that carry small risk and have high potential upside.
The critical corollary is that if you still feel it is a problem that Google doesn't provide support, and feel that "the market will fix it" is unconvincing in light of the available evidence, then you ought to be in favour of regulation that obligates them to.
> I would be in favor of such regulations, and yet I'm also not against the project here, so i don't see your point
The point is that FAANG companies are smart enough to elude a simple Hanlon's razor analysis.
Put more explicitly:
1. Your critique of OP's argument is fundamentally correct. Pointing out that Google could solve the problem if they wanted to is missing the point. Google doesn't want to solve the problem
2. Therefore, we either have to live with the status quo, or we have to change the incentive structure.
It might seem trivial to you, but I think it's an important point. Many members of the hn crowd exhibit this cognitive dissonance where on the one hand, they have a strong moral intuition that a particularly policy of tech giants is wrong (in this case, their choice not to put money in support), but on the other hand, an equally strong knee-jerk resistance to regulation of our industry.
Recognition that Google (or any other giant) are just doing what's best for them (as per their definition of "best") is an important step.
Why just obligate them to? They do not play nice, we should not play nice either (yes, obligating them is playing nice). I instead suggest nationalizing them, or close them down and arrest at least the executives.
Obligating them would solve the problem without creating a bunch of new problems. Your suggestions would create more problems than they solve.
A given company is typically not Capital-G-Good or Capital-E-Evil. They are probably doing some things well, and doing some things poorly. They respond to incentives. When a company is doing things poorly in a way that is hurting consumers, we should ask what incentives they're responding to.
Google has failed at support. They also do plenty of things well. On my view it's weird to take the position that they don't. I regard Google Search as the crown jewel of modern engineering.
It doesn't work that way, Karen. Or you think they should move their 300k+ SWEs to manually cipher through millions of blocked trash to find something that wasn't supposed to be suspended?
I'll take your "Karen" reference as a crude attempt to insult OP. Let me recycle your "argument": You think Google should hire "300k+" SWEs (in reality according to their public filings it's more like a 5th of that at best) to build and maintain millions of servers in a system that indexes billions of pieces of information on the open internet just so in a fraction of a second you can find a tired meme (and definitely NOT to find the actual number of SWEs Google has) to use in an inaccurate answer to a legitimate question, albeit irrelevant to the posted topic? But here they are doing it.
Alphabet is a trillion dollar company. The reason they're not fixing their customer support issues is that nobody is making them. They're not losing customers and they can just save the money. This doesn't make it OK or excusable. Certainly not with the "arguments" you brought.
It costs way less to build something like that and depreciate it afterwards than have a proper support team, just one person going through complaints won't do it.
This is probably well paid engineers side project while they didn't have anything better to do.
This is the kind of stuff that people in 300 years will shake their head in disbelief about when reading about it in the footnote of an history book.
Up there with the people X-raying their feet to find the perfect shoe, the people who deciding to illegally tap into a natural gas line at the overfunded New London High School and the people happily unearthing lost church books to hand over to the Nazis just for the thrill of the puzzle.
You have this minuscule upside of going "heh, I am in a painting" and this giant array of really, really, really fucking bad second order effects looming on the other side. This really summarizes the problem with the current society and Big Tech perfectly.
I understand what you're saying and I'm not having a go at you but "really, really, really fucking bad second order effects" are what exactly?
Telling anyone that people in 300 years will judge them negatively isn't really going to motivate them to change. I'm personally at the point where there needs to be a set of horror stories written in non-tech language about data people share directly impacting their life. But what are those stories?
* Almost all genocides (and extermination wars), especially those in one's country, were heavily dependent on data availability and the technology to crunch it. Most prominent maybe the Holocaust: Doing a census so thorough that the asinine concept of "Quarter-Jews" and what not could be calculated was estimated to take ten years to infinity. Until IBM offered to custom-design their new punch card tech design for the Nazis; they did in three months. The data? Openly accessible church books and forms people filled out, mostly about themselves. You could really have a field day with the data lying around today plus the one people readily give you in exchange for some gimmicks. Arguably, this is already ongoing in various parts of the world.
* Terrorism so dangerous that it actually makes a dent in the yearly death count. There is an article about a hacked water plant right now on HN. Just scale that up to, say, all the water plants. For every wacky "hey, we could do this with this data" idea there is somebody else with an equally but way more fucked up "hey, we could do this with this data" idea.
* There will be a 2030 study about mass discrimination by AI. Maybe it will be "This hiring AI was used to reject 1.3 billion applications over the last 10 years. Apparently it really dislikes Pakistani men for some reason. Oops" or "There was a weird error in our visa pipeline software. Our condolences to the families of the 43,561 people that were rejected and subsequently killed because their last name contained the letters 'rt'", I don't know. If that sounds absurd to you, go check the HN thread about the alleged murderer, where people argue whether "IP protection law" and "Move Fast and Break Things" are good frameworks to discuss software that literally decides about live and death.
Being german i had a very hard time figuring out what this comment is supposed to mean. Could you rephrase it so one might be able to answer your Question?
67 comments
[ 3.7 ms ] story [ 135 ms ] threadBut, not this particular bit. If they already know the value of a given bit there is minimal possible harm in disclosing it to them again.
All the information is held by private companies and the gov’t gets the info from them voluntarily.
Ditto for the First Amendment. Worthless. Instead of the govt prohibiting speech, the govt just has private companies do it for them.
How many times a week on HackerNews do you see this kind of exchange:
A: Facebook censored this or that and thus infringes on free speech.
B: It’s a private company; it can do what it wants.
A: But, but, there’s something wrong with that!
B: Don’t like it, make your own Facebook. Hur dur...
Etc. Ad nauseum.
Clearly, both (A) and (B) above are trying to reason through something within an outdated and outmoded framework; it’s why both sides sound silly.
Anyway, this is the same thing... but with the 4th amendment.
Same problem.
A private company that holds your data can do with it what it wishes. And, like the first amendment, if the govt makes it clear to these private companies that they ought ‘voluntarily’ cooperate with the govt “if they know what’s good for them,” then then Bill of Rights is worthless.
The 1st and 4th were meant to protect us from a tyrannical govt; not a tyrannical corporation.
Scrap the entire ball of wax and start over.
The Constitution — at this point — is an utter joke.
Businesses on the scale of a Facebook or a Google or Walmart simply did not exist anywhere, at any point in time in human history up to that point. But they rightly left these matters to the civil authorities, and the governed.
So no, the Constitution is not an utter joke. Our politicians and our indolent populace are.
That’s not blindingly obvious.
I believe a typical Founding Father would shudder at the thought of the government having anything whatsoever to say about the manner in which a church administered itself.
Dutch East India Company?
Surely you must be joking.
I wish I could downvote this post.
Kind of getting a weird celebrity-recognition-part-of-the-brain vibe of that off this story? Except it's AI's dreaming instead of human people?
Mobile extracts facial landmarks “signature” and sends to server only numbers.
Server runs an algorithm to find “neighbors” to those facial landmarks based on signatures collected from museum photos and present the closest match.
Actually pretty simple nowadays. Challenge off course is to collect the museum photos, what google spent some millions doing for other project.
It will prompt me to see if the one they associated with me then has been updated.
I assume this is more of Google not wanting to put the effort into researching and complying with the law for a one-off arts and culture project, sort of like how the website for Mom & Pops deli in upstate NY started banning European visitors because of fear/misunderstanding of the GDPR.
0: https://www.howtogeek.com/227084/how-to-use-google-photos-to...
1: https://support.google.com/photos/answer/9547620?hl=en-GB#gb...
2: https://blog.google/products/photos/storage-changes/
(I'll buy you a beer if you convincingly explain to me that these two analogies are meaningfully different)
PS, not defending google, they generally suck.
Volunteering at a pet shelter is not part of the business of being an angry anonymous internet person.
Not that I disagree with you here just making the argument.
Like parent said, I found that google has decent customer service once you clearly become their client (which I have been on adwords, analytics and on gsuite).
I'd wager that the parent poster doesn't have any sort of direct relationship with the local pet shelter: there's no contract, or handshake agreements, nothing like that.
The lack of a relationship is key.
Google provides services to a large number of people, and while they don't charge (most) consumers directly for those services in dollar-units, Google's user base does pay via other means: nominally by being on the receiving end of hyper-targeted ads.
There's a relationship there. Google provides a service, in exchange for psychological capital, which Google then translates into cashflow via advertisers.
Relationships, good ones at least, require trust. And the fact that I know that there is a server inside of Google which will mercilessly nuke my account from orbit without warning... isn't exactly trust-inspiring.
Moreover, I know that if that does happen, I have effectively zero options to resolve the problem. I'm screwed.
Google could choose to fix this problem, and to invest their rather substantial resources in building trust. But they don't, and instead kick out toy apps like the above. This sends a very strong message to people like the parent poster, in that Google doesn't really value them or their well-being.
Now, Google isn't required to be trustworthy. Plenty of organizations aren't. But there's nothing wrong with customers calling that out and demanding more when they feel Google isn't allocating its resources in their best interests. It's also completely within Google's purview to utterly ignore them.
That's the difference: in one case, there's an established relationship, and that comes with certain expectations. In the other, not so much.
Lots of things originate from google. You can say the exact same thing of all of them. In fact you can plain and simply say "Google has time to do ANYTHING, yet it doesn't have time to provide customer support for that very thing?"
There's a point to be made that Google should be providing support. Do you think this, specifically, is what they should cut for it?
The critical corollary is that if you still feel it is a problem that Google doesn't provide support, and feel that "the market will fix it" is unconvincing in light of the available evidence, then you ought to be in favour of regulation that obligates them to.
Because I would be in favor of such regulations, and yet I'm also not against the project here, so i don't see your point.
The point is that FAANG companies are smart enough to elude a simple Hanlon's razor analysis.
Put more explicitly: 1. Your critique of OP's argument is fundamentally correct. Pointing out that Google could solve the problem if they wanted to is missing the point. Google doesn't want to solve the problem 2. Therefore, we either have to live with the status quo, or we have to change the incentive structure.
It might seem trivial to you, but I think it's an important point. Many members of the hn crowd exhibit this cognitive dissonance where on the one hand, they have a strong moral intuition that a particularly policy of tech giants is wrong (in this case, their choice not to put money in support), but on the other hand, an equally strong knee-jerk resistance to regulation of our industry.
Recognition that Google (or any other giant) are just doing what's best for them (as per their definition of "best") is an important step.
A given company is typically not Capital-G-Good or Capital-E-Evil. They are probably doing some things well, and doing some things poorly. They respond to incentives. When a company is doing things poorly in a way that is hurting consumers, we should ask what incentives they're responding to.
Google has failed at support. They also do plenty of things well. On my view it's weird to take the position that they don't. I regard Google Search as the crown jewel of modern engineering.
Bro.
Alphabet is a trillion dollar company. The reason they're not fixing their customer support issues is that nobody is making them. They're not losing customers and they can just save the money. This doesn't make it OK or excusable. Certainly not with the "arguments" you brought.
This is probably well paid engineers side project while they didn't have anything better to do.
Up there with the people X-raying their feet to find the perfect shoe, the people who deciding to illegally tap into a natural gas line at the overfunded New London High School and the people happily unearthing lost church books to hand over to the Nazis just for the thrill of the puzzle.
You have this minuscule upside of going "heh, I am in a painting" and this giant array of really, really, really fucking bad second order effects looming on the other side. This really summarizes the problem with the current society and Big Tech perfectly.
* Terrorism so dangerous that it actually makes a dent in the yearly death count. There is an article about a hacked water plant right now on HN. Just scale that up to, say, all the water plants. For every wacky "hey, we could do this with this data" idea there is somebody else with an equally but way more fucked up "hey, we could do this with this data" idea.
* There will be a 2030 study about mass discrimination by AI. Maybe it will be "This hiring AI was used to reject 1.3 billion applications over the last 10 years. Apparently it really dislikes Pakistani men for some reason. Oops" or "There was a weird error in our visa pipeline software. Our condolences to the families of the 43,561 people that were rejected and subsequently killed because their last name contained the letters 'rt'", I don't know. If that sounds absurd to you, go check the HN thread about the alleged murderer, where people argue whether "IP protection law" and "Move Fast and Break Things" are good frameworks to discuss software that literally decides about live and death.