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Quit your Google addiction. Use privacy focused Services.

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cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/21474523

Youtube was originally a match-making/dating site. Sadly it expanded beyond that into a technofeudal fiefdom that takes 45% of ad revenue from contributors. YouTube has amassed a rich collection of repair videos, both general repair and specific repairs to specific problems on particular appliances. It guts me that a protectionist unethical surveillance advertiser has exclusive control over repair information that they have jailed, restricted access to, and held hostage from all but their boot-licking pawns (3 billion of them). Google has recently locked down the platform to prevent the Tor network for fetching the content while also going around with a stick to swat the Invidious nodes that make fetching videos possible.

Google’s assault on user freedoms has ensured (for example) that I cannot go to the library (which has an uncapped Internet connection) and download videos covering how to repair my appliances so that I can go home and play them while repairing, as many times as needed. Google expects me to either drag my whole washing machine into the public library, or to memorize the steps. Try memorizing the steps to fix a Canon paper feeder. It’s probably 100 or so steps; so many steps that there is even a separate re-assembly video.

It is unreasonable to demand that repairers:

  • have an uncapped internet connection at home
  • watch copious commercial ads (some of us are ethically opposed to advertising)
  • support Google (we should have a right to boycott companies that were fined $170 million for collecting data non-consentually and exercising that right should not block repair when repair is in the public interest to avoid e-waste)

What is the fix here? Libraries are blocked by copyright that is designed to feed Google’s greed for ad revenue. Even if we could ask local govs to declare Google’s copyright on repair videos unenforcable, the videos still need to be obtained.

I think we need to invent a tech solution. Such as an app that combines the concept of bittorrent with a YouTube API whereby every peer who manages to access a video seeds it as a torrent and also grabs the transcript in a text file.

Any ideas what could reasonably be asked of a local gov to address this problem? In principle, it should involve public libraries because Google has ruined the service of the public library in this regard.

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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/4729811

I created an infographic of privacy-forward alternatives to Google products...and would love your feedback.

Is it easy to use? Enough white space? Intuitive? Sharable? Is there anything I'm missing?

The infographic image in this post is NOT clickable. The link above will give you a downloadable PDF with working hyperlinks.

Re: the legend, "easy set-up/use" means either that this is a big part of the alternative product's branding, or I've used it myself and found it easy.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/27344091

  1. Persistent Device Identifiers

My id is (1 digit changed to preserve my privacy):

38400000-8cf0-11bd-b23e-30b96e40000d

Android assigns Advertising IDs, unique identifiers that apps and advertisers use to track users across installations and account changes. Google explicitly states:

“The advertising ID is a unique, user-resettable ID for advertising, provided by Google Play services. It gives users better controls and provides developers with a simple, standard system to continue to monetize their apps.” Source: Google Android Developer Documentation

This ID allows apps to rebuild user profiles even after resets, enabling persistent tracking.

  1. Tracking via Cookies

Android’s web and app environments rely on cookies with unique identifiers. The W3C (web standards body) confirms:

“HTTP cookies are used to identify specific users and improve their web experience by storing session data, authentication, and tracking information.” Source: W3C HTTP State Management Mechanism https://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2109/rfc2109

Google’s Privacy Sandbox initiative further admits cookies are used for cross-site tracking:

“Third-party cookies have been a cornerstone of the web for decades… but they can also be used to track users across sites.” Source: Google Privacy Sandbox https://privacysandbox.com/intl/en_us/

  1. Ad-Driven Data Collection

Google’s ad platforms, like AdMob, collect behavioral data to refine targeting. The FTC found in a 2019 settlement:

“YouTube illegally harvested children’s data without parental consent, using it to target ads to minors.” Source: FTC Press Release https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/press-releases/2019/09/google-youtube-will-pay-record-170-million-settlement-over-claims

A 2022 study by Aarhus University confirmed:

“87% of Android apps share data with third parties.” Source: Proceedings of the ACM on Interactive, Mobile, Wearable and Ubiquitous Technologies https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3534593

  1. Device Fingerprinting

Android permits fingerprinting by allowing apps to access device metadata. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) warns:

“Even when users reset their Advertising ID, fingerprinting techniques combine static device attributes (e.g., OS version, hardware specs) to re-identify them.” Source: EFF Technical Analysis https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2021/03/googles-floc-terrible-idea

  1. Hardware-Level Tracking

Google’s Titan M security chip, embedded in Pixel devices, operates independently of software controls. Researchers at Technische Universität Berlin noted:

“Hardware-level components like Titan M can execute processes that users cannot audit or disable, raising concerns about opaque data collection.” Source: TU Berlin Research Paper https://arxiv.org/abs/2105.14442

Regarding Titan M: Lots of its rsearch is being taken down. Very few are remaining online. This is one of them available today.

"In this paper, we provided the first study of the Titan M chip, recently introduced by Google in its Pixel smartphones. Despite being a key element in the security of these devices, no research is available on the subject and very little information is publicly available. We approached the target from different perspectives: we statically reverse-engineered the firmware, we audited the available libraries on the Android repositories, and we dynamically examined its memory layout by exploiting a known vulnerability. Then, we used the knowledge obtained through our study to design and implement a structure-aware black-box fuzzer, mutating valid Protobuf messages to automatically test the firmware. Leveraging our fuzzer, we identified several known vulnerabilities in a recent version of the firmware. Moreover, we discovered a 0-day vulnerability, which we responsibly disclosed to the vendor."

Ref: https://conand.me/publications/melotti-titanm-2021.pdf

  1. Notification Overload

A 2021 UC Berkeley study found:

“Android apps send 45% more notifications than iOS apps, often prioritizing engagement over utility. Notifications act as a ‘hook’ to drive app usage and data collection.” Source: Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3411764.3445589

How can this be used nefariously?

Let's say you are a person who believes in Truth and who searches all over the net for truth. You find some things which are true. You post it somewhere. And you are taken down. You accept it since this is ONLY one time.

But, this is where YOU ARE WRONG.

THEY can easily know your IDs - specifically your advertising ID, or else one of the above. They send this to Google to know which all EMAIL accounts are associated with these IDs. With 99.9% accuracy, AI can know the correct Email because your EMAIL and ID would have SIMULTANEOUSLY logged into Google thousands of times in the past.

Then they can CENSOR you ACROSS the internet - YouTube, Reddit, etc. - because they know your ID. Even if you change your mobile, they still have other IDs like your email, etc. You can't remove all of them. This is how they can use this for CENSORING. (They will shadow ban you, you wont know this.)

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/27440512

Trying to escape Google's ecosystem, but past purchases keep pulling me back. #DeGoogled #GoogleLockIn #PrivacyStruggles #TechDilemma #FOSS #DigitalFreedom #AndroidAlternatives

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Shoutout to u/theFallenWalnut on Reddit

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cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/27361675

Can we get from a world where Google is synonymous with search to a world where other search engines have a real chance to compete? The U.S. and state governments’ bipartisan antitrust suit, challenging the many ways that Google has maintained its search monopoly, offers an opportunity.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/27224563

I received mail from eures.europa.eu to Gmail for years before Google's new "be evil" act.

Ban Google in EU. Don't let citizens use enemy services in a cold war.

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cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/27091124

Imagine you own a restaurant and you get all your reservations online through your booking system; you even tell people to book online when they call, via an automated message. But then, all of a sudden, Google decides to hijack that booking link and replace it with Google Assistant's calling feature.

So instead of Google linking to the booking system you selected, let's say OpenTable booking integration. Now Google uses Google Assistant to try to call the restaurant and speak to a person. But no person will answer the call, the call goes to a message to tell people to book online. So the next thing that happens is that Google gives up calling, thinks there are no reservations available and tells those trying to book online that there are no reservations available.

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Originally posted on Reddit

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I’m having issues with Google takeout, it messes up the file names and thus the order of the photos.

Any tips?

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cross-posted from: https://reddthat.com/post/37106126

Right now a lot of us are trying to divest and diversify from having our entire lives on Google both because of the way Google spends its money and the long-standing privacy concerns seeming a bit more scary now.

What services have you switched to and what has your experience been? What do you like, what don't you like, would you recommend them?

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Immich is an open source and self hosted Google Photos alternative. It's apps are extremely polished and a viable alternative.

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A great European search engine that preserves your privacy.