'Should i bother installing door locks? Someone's already been in my house'
Yes. They have everything up to X date. Protect your future
'Should i bother installing door locks? Someone's already been in my house'
Yes. They have everything up to X date. Protect your future
Good point!
The best time to plant a tree is 20 years ago. The second best time is now.
Other comments have convinced me but you gave the best reply.
no time like the present
You absolutely should. With time, the data they have on you will grow outdated, meaning they won't be able to track an analyze your behaviour because they'll have no idea how you behave now. It's like the trail going cold. Hell, just becoming privacy focused already makes it near-impassible to be tracked, and since privacy-aware software doesn't track, collect, sell or buy your data, what little they have will be much less useful. Also, if you live in the EU, the GDPR gives you a right to request the deletion of all data they have on you, and they must comply. Most other places probably also have laws in place to request the deletion of your data.
Should I apply pressure to a wound despite already having lost a lot of blood
Should you quit smoking even though you've already been smoking for 7 years?
Better to not have started smoking, but still good to stop now.
The longer you go without giving new data, the less useful your old data will be. 6 months without new data? Not that big of a difference. 6 years without new data? Now that's a big deal.
If you found out that your mechanic had been ripping you off for the last 7 years, would you keep going to them for car repairs just because you'd already lost so much money to them?
It's not just about the practical aspects, it's about the principle. The big corpos make money from selling your data, do you really want to keep helping them make money off you after finding out how they do it?
I came here to make the same smoking analogy.
Of course. Very few people here would have been privacy conscious when they first started using the internet. There will inevitably be some amount of data available about all of us. The key thing to realise about privacy is that it is generally more about damage limitation/mitigation rather than outright prevention.
I can think of a couple decent reasons I think yes:
AI needs constant data to stay up to date, so i think it's still worth it.
Personally I've found a happy medium between total privacy and convenience.
Everyone should be more aware, custom ROMs, Linux, Foss applications, use Foss YouTube clients, privacy focused email account and tor browser, VPN if possible, torrent things you want to watch rather than Netflix, use cash not card and definitely do not add cards to your mobile devices. People need to stop using non-pirvacy respecting service as it negatively impacts everyone.
But I also understand that some will knowingly give information for "convenience". We all need to do our part in writing history. Vote with our attention, wallets .
Also in ops position, google, apple and all these products are gathering data for advertising, if your not seeing the adverts from your previous habits then that information is somewhat worthless so yes be privacy focused, using adblocker count towards you privacy. Good luck in your journey op
Don't fall for the "it's already bad, so it doesn't matter" way of thinking. That's how companies nowadays prevent us from fighting back for our rights.
Yes. the you that is most valuable to others, is you, as you are today, so right now is a perfectly fine time to embrace privacy focused practices!
i forgot the exact duration but in the military, if you capture an enemy and fail to extract information in the first few days he's useless as information source. consider yourself a freed POW, and every day that passes and you become a more intelligent, interested person and find new things you enjoy or don't enjoy, big tech's residual information is less valuable
You probably had different interest, travel, and product usage patterns now than you did ten years ago. I don't see why behavioral patterns wouldn't continue to change going forward, so as old data becomes obsolete taking care of present and future data is still worth doing to some extent even if past data might be freely available.
If you were sitting on a hot iron, would you not jump off just because you'd already sustained third-degree burns?
That data may have been harvested, but that's no reason to continue the trend.
It's always worth it, that's less money they're getting. Join the movement. They won't learn anything new about you or your life in the future.
Thanks to the CPRA (recent legislation, it only took effect at the start of this year), most companies must delete everything they know about you when asked to do so.
There are now companies that will automatically submit those requests on your behalf.
So.
When you're ready to stop the flow, check out services like Incogni. They'll submit requests to data brokers on your behalf automatically.
You'll want to keep it up for awhile, because one of the things that gets deleted (by law) is the record that you requested your data be deleted. (They have to delete everything with your info in it) So any new data with your name on it is fair game.
But if you slow the flow of traceable data, then sign up with a data removal service, you stand a solid chance of getting yourself off the advertiser's radars.
Privacy has become a very important issue in modern society, with companies and governments constantly abusing their power, more and more people are waking up to the importance of digital privacy.
In this community everyone is welcome to post links and discuss topics related to privacy.
much thanks to @gary_host_laptop for the logo design :)