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Data privacy: how to counter the "I have nothing to hide" argument?
  • Given that you completely ignore my arguments and replace my thesis with your, I'm inclined to think that you don't understand all implications and potential consequences. It's not like you've managed to disprove my point. You simply ignored it.

    Moreover, the fact that you don't care about privacy doesn't mean that your data can't be used against you. It can be used, it is being used and it will be used in the future.

  • Data privacy: how to counter the "I have nothing to hide" argument?
  • You're simplifying the issue down to a set of abstract photos that you claim not to care about, ignoring the broader implications. This tells me that you may not fully understand the complexity of our world, the ease with which you can be manipulated, and the potential consequences of such manipulation. The irony lies in the fact that you are essentially replacing my argument:

    Knowing your traits and preferences allows one to tailor a persuasive message specifically to you. This strategy can be used to sell you anything, from a mobile phone to a politician. The implications of such tactics are significant, potentially affecting billions of people.

    With your own:

    Being afraid that Google had a rouge dick pic that might leak with thousands of others is absurd.

    Then declaring it absurd. But in fact, it was your argument, not mine, that you characterized as such :)

  • Introducing Llama 2 - Meta's Next-Generation Commercially Viable Open-Source AI & LLM
  • On one hand Facebook has never done anything to help anyone not named Zuckerberg.

    Hm, React is also open-source - it's under the MIT license. A lot of people have jobs and develop or use products made with it. Probably there are other good examples that I'm not aware of.

    However, here the license is more restrictive:

    1. Additional Commercial Terms. If, on the Llama 2 version release date, the monthly active users of the products or services made available by or for Licensee, or Licensee's affiliates, is greater than 700 million monthly active users in the preceding calendar month, you must request a license from Meta, which Meta may grant to you in its sole discretion, and you are not authorized to exercise any of the rights under this Agreement unless or until Meta otherwise expressly grants you such rights.

    I wouldn't say that's a crazy requirement. A lot of businesses still could use it free of charge, because few have 700 million or more monthly active users. Besides, from the given text I'm not sure if this applies to the current version of the LLM or not.

    You can't fork it and change the license. You can't use it to develop another LLM either:

    v. You will not use the Llama Materials or any output or results of the Llama Materials to improve any other large language model (excluding Llama 2 or derivative works thereof).

    So yeah, while they want to protect their commercial interests and put some restrictions in place, we should discuss the actual license agreement instead of talking about trust and beliefs. To me, it doesn't look bad.

  • Data privacy: how to counter the "I have nothing to hide" argument?
  • Indeed, it's quite rare to find someone who isn't concerned about their photos, messages, and other sensitive information potentially being leaked online. Good for you, though I don't believe it's representative. Even so, there are potential risks to consider. With the right information, someone could manipulate, blackmail, or coerce you without you even realizing it. Our brains are subject to numerous biases, making us susceptible to subtle manipulations. Knowing your traits and preferences allows one to tailor a persuasive message specifically to you. This strategy can be used to sell you anything, from a mobile phone to a politician. The implications of such tactics are significant, potentially affecting billions of people.

  • Data privacy: how to counter the "I have nothing to hide" argument?
  • But if your photos leak, your colleagues could see them. Someone can blackmail you. Or do that using any other sensitive information.

  • Lemmy, meet Socrates!
  • When you realize that's the death sentence.

  • Data privacy: how to counter the "I have nothing to hide" argument?
  • Ask them to unlock their phone and give it to you. Chances are, you'll quickly find out they have things they'd like to hide.

  • I'm sick and tired of your feelings
  • Thanks for sharing your feelings!

  • Formula 1 Chat Post 2023.07
  • From my experience, they don't read articles either. People can have huge threads with hundreds of replies asking questions that already have been answered in the linked article. Though this is more common in politics and science. F1 media usually take one or two quotes and add 10 meaningless paragraphs that are not worth reading - this is where top comments come to help!

  • F1 qualifying change confirmed for Hungary
  • Lol, turns out there's text below this block. I'm so used that they put those 'read more' blocks at the end of the post on most websites.

  • F1 qualifying change confirmed for Hungary
  • the Italian tyre manufacturer will offer only 11 sets of tyres for the three-day event at the Hungaroring

    Down from...?

  • Is it worth paying the reaminder of my car loan off?
  • The action you should take depends on your goal. If you're aiming to make the best financial decision, you might calculate whether it would be more beneficial to invest $12.5k now, or to invest $350 each month instead. The latter would be possible if you decided to pay off the loan. However, if your decision is about feeling better, then paying off the loan seems to be the only option that would satisfy you. If you're from the US, having a loan might be necessary to get future loans.

  • It's Race Week! Let's talk about the Hungarian Grand Prix
  • The 2006 race was quite interesting: Button got his first win, Alonso retired after getting a penalty in a practice session on Friday, Kubica finished in the points in his first ever race only to be disqualified afterwards, while BMW got their first podium with Heidfeld. Then 2009 and the incident with Massa, obviously. Ocon's win in 2021 was totally unexpected, but the race was dull.

  • Weekend poll: When do you charge your smartphone?
  • My phone usually stands on the wireless charger as it's next to my PC. I charge it before going somewhere, because the phone is 6 years old and its battery could be better.

  • r/selfhosted is still rising, WTF? Come to Lemmy!!!
  • You need to compare with the same period last year.

  • What are some of the things you say / think to yourself when going through a hard time or dealing with uncertainty to help yourself along?
  • "Life wasn't always that bad, hence there's no reason for it to stay bad in the future."

    Of course, this won't work with something like incurable cancer. But most things we face are temporary. Even life.

  • Do you consider AI art “OC” ?
  • Then everything that is created by a real person is not OC either. I don't know why people think that we're somehow special.

  • ChatGPT use declines as users complain about ‘dumber’ answers, and the reason might be AI’s biggest threat for the future
  • I use it every day in my job and the quality of answers only drops off when prompts are poorly crafted.

    Same. It saves me a lot of time both at work and when I'm working on my personal projects. But you need to ask proper questions to get proper answers.