11 comments for “Impending Roe v Wade Demise Spotlights Privacy Risk for Everyone

  1. Anon
    May 28, 2022 at 02:56

    Uhhh… not 2 Name Names… But… Which Alfa dog has patent on appx 90% of android devices?

  2. Donald Duck
    May 27, 2022 at 12:32

    Well, well. Try just not having a phone. I don’t. Well I have a fixed landline but that’s it. When I go walking around my local park the PTB don’t know where I am or whether I’m wearing a mask since I walk in a thicket of trees, or doing something they don’t approve of. One thing is sure I don’t carry a phone around with me. Of course I don’t it gets permanently left at home indoors.

  3. Afdal
    May 27, 2022 at 05:35

    The problem is HOW to ensure the data you provide to send and receive communications is used for just that and nothing else? How can we possibly hold all these non-transparent private entities accountable when we can’t even stop our own government from committing mass surveillance? The people responsible for it will even commit perjury in front of Congress over the subject and face no consequences. I think a far more productive avenue is to minimize the amount of data which can be abused from being sent in the first place. That starts at a minimum with open-source, freedom-respecting hardware and software. This applies especially strongly to mobile phones, which are some of the most locked-down, proprietary computing devices in existence. As Richard Stallman is fond of pointing out: computing that you cannot control is used to control you.

  4. rachel
    May 27, 2022 at 02:28

    in the inverted Roe v. Wade “not my body, not my choice” world, if I were raped and got pregnant in my home state of Indiana and wanted to get to liberal Califonria for an abortion, heres what I would do

    1) don’t talk about it with anyone on the phone or in person
    2) purchase a computer for cash, at a second-hand computer store, and a VPN to search for an abortion doctor
    3) take the trip to CA in a car without gps and use a tomtom that doesn’t connect to the internet for directions
    4) leave the smartphone at home; purchase a burner phone in a different state with cash
    5) wear a Covid mask inside where there are cameras

    my post doesn’t cover the moral aspect of getting an abortion without telling the baby’s father, but in a post Roe v. Wade world, it’s a choice women may have to make

    a real problem in this scenario is most doctors keep patient history in an electronic database, so the doctor would have your name, address, SS#, and other info in a database that can be hacked even if you did all the steps above right and paid cash for the operation. you would have to find a doctor to do the operation outside that system and that could put you in the territory of “doctors” who practice organ trafficking.

  5. louie lepotino
    May 26, 2022 at 21:21

    “The greatest right we have is the right to be left alone.” Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis.

    End/stop the surveillance state.

    These devices are wholly unnecessary. You didn’t need then before. You don’t need then now. Continue to think for yourself- on your own. No reliance on artificial intelligence [sic.] It’s called artificial for a reason. Save your soul. Now.

  6. Jeff Harrison
    May 26, 2022 at 14:37

    Frankly, what you suggest won’t help. The NSA/CIA etc have violated what few laws we have and you think writing more laws will help?!? I have a smart phone but it sits resolutely on my desk with everything turned off. But the reality is that you have to generate the data for the gov and corps to abuse. No data, no abuse.

    • cyborg
      May 28, 2022 at 05:20

      Your phone sits alone on a desk while all of your family and friends are out at the T-Mobile and the Verizon parties, generating constant data. Your image, voice, name, phone number and common locations are already known to the biggest parties and the apps, even if you choose not to attend. Your anti-data collection strategy is like voting for the Green Party. You can only win if everyone else keeps their phone on the desk.

  7. Alan Hodge
    May 26, 2022 at 10:38

    Excellent article, thank you very much. I cannot speak with authority on these matters, though I often need to do so. There are millions of concerned citizens out there believing that someday a mass movement is going to change more than political rhetoric. They do not understand that they are already too well known to be allowed to participate in anything remotely dangerous to the Combine and its tools. This article will help me explain.

  8. Vera Gottlieb
    May 26, 2022 at 10:08

    For heaven’s sake, folks DUMP all this ‘must have’ garbage which is intruding in your private lives…and you pay for it.

    • Carolyn L Zaremba
      May 26, 2022 at 16:04

      That is impractical and nearly impossible. You cannot live without a cell phone. Many employers insist on you having one. There are no more pay phones, so you need a cell phone to be able to call anyone if you are not at home. And most people got rid of their landlines decades ago. Young people have never had landlines at all. If you want a job interview, you have to use Zoom because the pandemic is still keeping HR departments from working in their offices. I found this out and had to create a Zoom account or I would not be interviewed at all. The world is changing rapidly, my friend. We cannot go backward. What we CAN do is to rein in these cyber spies through law and that will be hard (but not impossible) because of the influence and cash that the mega-corporations have.

    • louie lepotino
      May 26, 2022 at 21:19

      “The greatest right we have is the right to be left alone.” Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis.

      End/stop the surveillance state.

      These devices are wholly unnecessary. You didn’t need then before. You don’t need then now. Continue to think for yourself- on your own. No reliance on artificial intelligence [sic.] It’s called artificial for a reason. Save your soul. Now.

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