Today I was contacted by someone at work. She graduated school with me and our 20 year reunion was coming up. Why did she contact me at work? It was the only way they were able to track me down. I was included in promotional material by name. She told me I "was the hardest to track down"and I had to smile.

This is just a small anecdote about privacy practices and their real life impact (and how your employer can undo all of it, I guess)

  • InfiniteGlitch
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    1331 year ago

    Call me pessimistic, but I do think:

    • Privacy is an illusion.
    • Control is an illusion (a reference to Mr. Robot).

    Certainly, we can do a lot to have more privacy, but it is an illusion to think that we have complete control over it. Especially with social media, jobs, and today’s technology.

    • Cyrus Draegur
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      31 year ago

      Morality is just as much of an illusion, doesn’t mean you should be allowed to smash someone’s skull in with a brick. Social constructs and social contract were dreamed up by our species because they work and have utility.

      So we better fucking do everything we CAN to sustain the "illusions*.

      • InfiniteGlitch
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        41 year ago

        It seems like my comment has upset you or at least agitated you, if that’s not the case – it’s the impression you gave me.

        I never said that we should ‘’not do everything we can’’; of course, we should. But that certainly does not mean we control everything. No matter how hard you try and how well you manage to maintain both privacy and control, at some point there will be a ‘’leak’’. Not by you but perhaps by your job, your family, friends or acquaintance. There are to many external things to have 100% control.

        In today’s era, both privacy and control are truly mere illusions because you can maintain your privacy and believe you are in control, yet somewhere along the way, you leave a trail behind, especially with technology. I’m not sure why you brought ‘’morality’’ into the discussion of privacy and control – because that’s a whole other argument. This post and my comments were merely about these two.

        Though, I did not expect my comment to get this much attention. It’s just my personal opinion, you can agree and disagree.

  • @Got_Bent@lemmy.world
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    791 year ago

    I had this argument with my boss and lost. They made all of us take photos that they posted on the company website. I said I’m working pretty hard on making myself invisible and don’t appreciate being forced to out myself like this. Tough shit. My name picture and contact info are out there for all to see.

  • @d3Xt3r@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I have a Google Alert set up, so I get notified in case my name pops up on the web. A month after I joined a new company, I got an alert - turned out that their internal directory page was exposed to the public web. I was pretty livid - all this time I was proud of maintaining good anonymity, looking up my name never returned anything meaningful on Google. So I complained to my boss about this, and he said it was actually a bug/misconfiguration - which they were already aware of, but didn’t bother fixing it because no one complained. I was super pissed and made it very clear that it was a violation of my privacy and I wanted it taken down ASAP. Thankfully my boss was understanding and got it fixed. Then I had to report the page to Google. It took a while, but it was finally gone from the search results.

    • @Preflight_Tomato@lemm.ee
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      151 year ago

      To help with this in the future, you can also create several fake results sharing your real name. Stuff like a blogger with one post not in your writing style, etc… This will dilute searches with disinformation. Removal of real data is important, but you can also confuse anyone looking.

      • Natanael
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        1 year ago

        You could use an AI generated fake face and fake history too if your name is unique to make people think they either found the wrong person or make them unsure of the other listings mentioning you with only your name as an identifier

  • Th4tGuyII
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    471 year ago

    In terms of online presence I think one has to be careful about becoming too private - at what point do you become so untrackable that even people you would like to find you (I.e. old friends) can’t anymore.

  • @TCB13@lemmy.world
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    421 year ago

    I guess you can ask her how she managed to track you… later on do the necessary adjustments.

  • THCDenton
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    261 year ago

    As the Eric Cartman of my school. I will not have this problem.

  • @Etterra@lemmy.world
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    111 year ago

    Luckily I hated everyone in highschool and they never bothered me again once I left. If this has happened to me I’d have laughed in their face.

  • @barbara@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    It may not always be good to be invisible. You could make a website for yourself sich that people can find you and contact you. You can tgen decide if you want to write back. E.g a mastodon account would be enough. You don’t gave to blog with that acc.

    • @weker01@feddit.de
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      51 year ago

      Someone is putting a lot of work into including/inviting you.

      Yea my first respond would also totally be: “Fuck that person in particular” /s