5/2/2026 at 5:54:48 PM
Oh but it will get worse. Legislation to force companies to install survtech in their devices/apps is already being pushed left and right. We are still screaming a little about it, but I think it's a matter of time before it gets normalized and the state goes for the next level, which will be to prosecute individuals who try to evade the surveillance net. The recent case with GrapheneOS[^1], while still far from being an example of it, it is sufficient to inspire some legislators...[^1] https://www.androidauthority.com/google-pixel-organized-crim...
by dsign
5/2/2026 at 6:42:35 PM
That's why we need to get as many people on surveillance-free devices as quickly as possible. 400K users [1] may be easy to ignore or make suspect, 4M is a little harder, 40M is a serious blip on the radar, 400M is a major force (one can dream).If you do not like surveillance capitalism (which enables government surveillance), get a compatible phone and install GrapheneOS now. Help family and friends get set up tomorrow. Make it a force too large to reckon with before the legislation is there (legislation is somewhat slow, so there is a window of opportunity).
by microtonal
5/3/2026 at 1:24:56 AM
People have been bending over for policies and changes with way more impact to their everyday lives and livelihoods, and they'll rise up for this? That's daydreaming.by coldtea
5/3/2026 at 7:05:27 AM
Maybe not, but I have seen a quick rise in interest in GrapheneOS and other AOSP-based alternatives among tech people. I think the current state of the US has done a lot to make people more motivated.by microtonal
5/3/2026 at 12:17:27 PM
I'm running workshops to install linux on laptop or grapheneOS on pixels.The cool kids are doing it.
by dopidopHN2
5/2/2026 at 7:32:42 PM
I could care less about surveillance on my phone or the internet. I can just stop using the internet for anything besides the necessities. It’s physical, IRL surveillance that is a nightmare. You can’t escape it, there’s no way to opt out and consent doesn’t matter.by dyauspitr
5/3/2026 at 6:36:16 AM
Phone surveillance is IRL surveillance. That's because your phone connects to cell towers that exist in the real world, and they can snitch on your precise location in real time.Consent never mattered btw.
by nextaccountic
5/3/2026 at 1:27:12 AM
"I don't care for surveillance on devices/internet because I can always cut off myself from the thing 8 billion people use and has become absolutely essential, and often mandated or strongly pushed, for work, banking, and even government interactions"by coldtea
5/2/2026 at 8:46:04 PM
So you do care somewhat about surveillance on your devices then!by i_love_retros
5/2/2026 at 9:19:27 PM
Where did I say that? The necessities? All the necessities are browser based. I can do that on Kali if I absolutely needed too.by dyauspitr
5/2/2026 at 9:51:28 PM
> All the necessities are browser based.Until they aren't.
In the EU there's the PSD2 SCA that requires 2 out of 3 factors from something the user knows/has/is for online banking. The "has" has been essentially chosen by most banks as a closed source app that can only be run on locked down surveillance-prone unrooted phones running Android or iOS, and you can only get it from the Google or Apple repositories. Your phone nor being under your control is seen as good here, because it forces the "has" factor.
So in the EU you can't bank (a necessity) with most banks on Kali.
The US maybe doesn't have such regulations or banks don't follow them, but I think you'll agree a lot of things require apps now. Maybe not the necessities, but we have to fight for the right to use whatever device we want. Fuck phones and fuck mandatory MFA.
The alternative to a banking app I experienced a few years ago was a hardware token which costs money, but not a lot of banks offer it. It was made by a useless company that issues overpriced certificates and tokens for mandatory MFA in the banking sector and some government programs, among other things. A company whose business is sustained by the regulations. I expected a TOTP token or something, but it was something ridiculous like I had plug into a USB port and connect it to the browser with some proprietary app. It worked only on Debian-based distros. Virtualizing it was a pain as it was before LLMs were good and I had to sift through long logs with information about USB-specifics I didn't want to know.
"But it's not phishable" is the usual reply when discussing these "stronger" types of MFA. It's my money, let me get phished - is my reply.
The regulators, Google and Apple with their device attestation APIs, the useless token companies - they all benefit one way or another. They have no honor.
by Worf
5/2/2026 at 9:47:05 PM
> Where did I say that?>> I could care less about surveillance
I believe the parent is splitting hairs over your wording; if you didn't care at all, then you couldn't care less.
by bigyabai
5/2/2026 at 10:41:45 PM
It's not splitting hairs it's the literal meaning of the words.It's confusing and clarification is necessary in order to work out how to engage with the comment.
by BLKNSLVR
5/2/2026 at 7:41:14 PM
I agree.Even if you walk by a FLOCK camera you are catalogued.
Sickening bravado of these privacy stealing folk.
by frankharv
5/2/2026 at 8:13:09 PM
[dead]by iririririr