I've been viscerally opposed to regulating technology except the the most rare of circumstances.

That was before our new masters of the universe turned us into the subjects of black-box science experiments at accelerating speeds -- and fired the people who think about the ethics of it all.

This is unacceptable, and if the public doesn't wake up, a few mega-wealthy and powerful people could ruin everything for everyone but (temporarily) themselves.

@dangillmor Or you can just choose to opt-out of those "black-box science experiments".

If nobody used them, they'd vanish in a heartbeat.

But that requires self-control, which so few people seem to possess.

@LouisIngenthron @dangillmor I applaud and agree with your sentiment. unfortunately, it takes a concerted effort to opt out of those "black-box science experiments", which is more than most busy people have time for...

/1

@LouisIngenthron @dangillmor

However, any time you reply to an email with someone who has a GMail address (or any other email providers that are part of the "surveillance capitalism" system), you have opted-in.

Though, it's often more subtle. As @briankrebs points out in infosec.exchange/@briankrebs/1 , if anybody who has you in their contact list installs an app supporting that business model you have been opted-in whether you like it or not.

/eof

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@mcrocker @dangillmor @briankrebs They haven't "opted you in" to anything. They've shared data you shared with them with a company, as is their right. If you don't want other people to share your data, then either don't give it to them or ask them not to share it.

That said, personal data privacy is one of the few areas where the government could stand to be a bit more involved.

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