• @ShinkanTrain@lemmy.ml
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    8 months ago

    Techbros really went full police state just to deliver ads I wouldn’t click on straight into my adblocker

      • M137
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        378 months ago

        Even people you’d really expect to use adblockers. A good example is right here on Lemmy, people here are generally pretty tech-savvy yet you get threads with lots of people complaining about ads. This has been a weird lesson as I get older, seeing that most people somehow don’t even think about lifting a finger to fix things they see as problems, they really just complain and then do absolutely nothing to help themselves. It’s the same with if someone mentions something they don’t know what it is, instead of taking 5 seconds to just look it up they comment to ask about it and then never reply to people answering their question. I’m certain that it’s very common to have some weird need to make others do work for you, they don’t actually care about finding out what something is or how to do something to fix a problem, they just care about making others spend any kind of effort for them.

          • @shneancy@lemmy.world
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            88 months ago

            if someone is like, half of the described vampire i don’t mind. Honestly it feels strange to have our ancient way of finding things out (asking your friends if they know) be somehow seen as wrong nowadays. I want to learn from other human being, not disembodied pieces of information oftentimes tied to ads for driver updating software

          • @gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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            58 months ago

            I encountered a user a week or two ago who was confused by the inaccurate output of an LLM, didn’t/couldn’t understand that it’s more or less just fancy autocomplete, who then tried to interact with the post replies as if the users were also an LLM. I had a great time calling that out. It was kinda hilarious, tbh.

        • @anhydrous@lemmy.world
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          48 months ago

          I work as a software engineer with other software engineers. Even software engineers and UX designers using the internet that way. Talented ones. Many of them - maybe the majority. It takes me a second to get over my astonishment when they share their screens. Not only astonishment at how overboard ads have gotten w/o an adblocker, but also that this particular person doesn’t use an adblocker.

          So many people aren’t well-informed about what ad networks or doing, or how different the web experience could be.

      • @Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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        8 months ago

        I have a friend that pays Google a YouTube tax every month… He tells me he wants to support the creators.

        I’m just kind of sad for him… I tried to explain direct donations were a million times more effective, but he clearly just doesn’t want to learn how to use an adblocker.

        This guy is like 30 years old.

      • @MeatsOfRage@lemmy.world
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        38 months ago

        It’s about to be a lot more with the chrome manifest update. I got my dad into chrome some 15 years ago and explaining why he should switch to Firefox is completely confusing for him. He thinks his own business listing on Google won’t work if he’s not using Chrome.

      • Blaster M
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        8 months ago

        I’ve had people that refuse to use an adblocker because “the creators deserve to get paid”. Well, your funeral if you get malvertising…

  • @cmnybo@discuss.tchncs.de
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    908 months ago

    Recent versions of Android make it much more difficult for a background app to access the microphone. There will be a notification if any background app is using the mic or camera.

    • @ChillPill@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Google’s “Now playing” feature constantly listens to what’s going on in the background to show you what songs are playing. They claim this is done with a local database of song “fingerprints”. The feature does not show the microphone indicator because: “…Now Playing is protected by Android’s Private Compute Core…”

      I’m not saying that other, non-google, app do this to my knowledge; but the fact that this is a thing is honestly a bit scary.

      Edit: screenshot of the “Now Playing” feature

      1000009252

      • @Pichu0102@lemmy.world
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        308 months ago

        For what it’s worth, I did just test it with airplane mode and it still correctly identified the song playing. So at the very least, it’s not lying about using a local database to identify songs, at least when it is offline.

        • @Im_Cool_I_Promise@lemmy.world
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          98 months ago

          It also uses a cloud fingerprint database apparently according to the second paragraph:

          If you turn on “Show search button on lock screen”, each time you tap to search Google receives a short, digital audio fingerprint to identify what’s playing.

          • @Pichu0102@lemmy.world
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            68 months ago

            Oh, I didn’t notice this, my apologies. Turning on identify songs nearby reveals two new options, notifications and show search button. That show search button option must be new; I had identify nearby music on already since my last phone. Guess they added something new. My bad.

      • kratoz29
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        48 months ago

        I have seen said feature being mentioned or brought to other android versions whether with apps or modules, do they work the same way?

        • @ChillPill@lemmy.world
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          58 months ago

          I’m not sure how other apps or android versions work. This is a flaw with the closed source software ecosystem.

        • @ChillPill@lemmy.world
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          278 months ago

          What other apps use Google’s “Android Private Compute Core” and therefore don’t show mic or camera usage notifications? Not trying to sound all tinfoil hat here, but seriously: can apps other than those from Google use the “Android Private Compute Core”? Even if only Google’s own apps can use the “Android Private Compute Core”, we can’t see the source code for Google’s apps as (far as I know, anyway) they are not open source. If an app is not open source, we do not really know what the app is doing in the background; we’ll just have to take them at their word.

          • @ChapulinColorado@lemmy.world
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            88 months ago

            Not to mention companies and their software (especially older versions) are commonly hacked. If there was a vulnerability, how long did my phone provide the hackers with unlimited access to those features to have them possibly try to extort me in real life.

      • @db2@lemmy.world
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        98 months ago

        Now if there was only an easy way to get to the offending app to identify it

        • atocci
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          188 months ago

          Pull open quick settings and tap the dot.

            • atocci
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              8 months ago

              For Samsung at least, tapping the dot will tell you what’s accessing what. I can’t confirm if it works on other flavors of Android unfortunately.

  • Flying Squid
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    478 months ago

    They really need to name-and-shame beyond “Facebook Partner” considering we’re talking about fucking Cox Media Group.

  • @N0body@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    458 months ago

    “Meta does not use your phone’s microphone for ads and we’ve been public about this for years,” the statement read. “We are reaching out to CMG to get them to clarify that their program is not based on Meta data.”

    Ah, yes. The tried and true defense of “we’ve denied it for years and continue to deny it” must be credible coming from a source as trustworthy as Facebook. I hear they’re planning on holding a press conference to pinky swear they’re not listening to the microphone they demand access to in order to show you ads that make them money.

    • edric
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      348 months ago

      FWIW, this was debunked when CMG originally made the claim. It was a marketing guy overselling their product and they had to correct their statement. They use the same info data brokers collect, and phones actively listening to you is not true.

      • @conciselyverbose@sh.itjust.works
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        138 months ago

        Even what they said could be true without applying to phones. They said “smart devices” a lot. They never said “smart phone”.

        There are a lot of IoT devices, some of which have microphones, a lot less secure than either iPhone or Android.

      • @N0body@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        58 months ago

        The fundamental question is, “Do you trust Facebook?” They have the resources to manipulate the story and twist the truth. They have the capability to spy on you with mics, but they say they don’t do so. Do you trust them?

    • @Capricorn_Geriatric@lemmy.world
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      498 months ago

      Wouldn’t want to be mean to Facebook users, but the vast majority of them probably has micophone access enabled for Messenger at least, if not Facebook.

    • @PM_Your_Nudes_Please@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      At least on iOS, it takes it a step farther and tells you specifically when an app is accessing your location, microphone, camera, etc… It even delineates when it’s in the foreground or background. For instance, if I check my weather app, I get this symbol in the upper corner:

      The circled arrow means it is actively accessing my location. And if I close the app, it gives me this instead:

      The uncircled arrow means my location was accessed in the foreground recently. And if it happens entirely in the background, (like maybe Google has accessed my location to check travel time for an upcoming calendar event,) then the arrow will be an outline instead of being filled in.

      The same basic rules apply for camera and mic access. If it accesses my mic, I get an orange dot. If it accesses my camera, I get a green dot.

      • @OrekiWoof@lemmy.ml
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        48 months ago

        Yeah it’s great, same thing on the Google Pixel. The mic/camera thing brings peace of mind

      • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏
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        8 months ago

        For anyone who doesn’t have a device that natively supports this feature, there’s an app on F-Droid called “Privacy Indicators” that provides this for camera and mic access. It uses the built-in Accessibility services to provide this, and needs a couple of other special permissions

        You can change the color of the indicator, mine’s red for more visibility.

        I installed it from GitHub however, since the F-Droid build was really outdated: https://github.com/NitishGadangi/Privacy-Indicator-App

      • @whalebiologist@lemmy.world
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        28 months ago

        I know you mean well, but you are making assumptions that the software is not lying to you. You can’t trust a UI element.

    • @Clbull@lemmy.world
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      88 months ago

      Facebook listening in on your microphone is one of those things that I actually believe to be true. Ever had conversations with people to then realize that you’re being served targeted ads based on these conversations? Seems very coincidental.

      • Phoenixz
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        108 months ago

        Nope

        There are other ways they do that, like thrird party cookies, and combining data from many, many sources.

        Apps simply CAN’T access those kinds of things unless you allow it. You can check this in the apps permissions on your phone if you’re not sure. If microphone access is allowed, then yeah, they’ll be listening, probably. But remove that permission and you’ll be fine

  • @werefreeatlast@lemmy.world
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    398 months ago

    Dildos, lots of dildos! I’m just gonna repeat that while I’m driving to see if I start getting Google ads for dildos.

  • @Jezebelley@lemm.ee
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    378 months ago

    “Yeah but the marketplace!” “Yeah but my friends use Messenger!”

    Normies don’t care about anything. They’ll keep using that piece of crap social app.

    • @shneancy@lemmy.world
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      68 months ago

      call me a normie but I do like having contact with my family. And though I’d love to move somewhere where my privacy is respected - there’s no point in using a messaging app if you’re the only one there

      and no I can’t convince my 76 year old grandma to move to signal, she barely wrapped her head around Facebook

      • @RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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        -28 months ago

        That’s a BS reason. I have 2 members of the Baby Boomer generation in my Signal contacts, they use it all the time with no problems. It’s no harder than iMessage to use. They would like it better when they see that Signal doesn’t gimp the image quality between Android and iOS phones unlike iMessage

        • @TheChargedCreeper864@lemmy.ml
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          18 months ago

          It isn’t. I’ve personally had it happen where a relative who went to some country that bans video calling and VoIP (except for the unencrypted/honey pots of course) and used Signal to call people back home (only because I told them it would be unblocked due to censorship circumvention). Despite everyone in my household being familiar with WhatsApp, I was the only who did video calls with them and had to share my device so others could also call them. Even when I’d set up Signal on one of their devices, they still complained it was to difficult to use, insisted I’d uninstall it when the trip was over and used it a grand total of once.

          I honestly think it’s partly to do with the nerd factor. This same relative turned out to also have installed the backdoored unencrypted app to chat with others, but hid it from us due to me being vocal about not using that. These other households, also WhatsApp based, managed to install, sign up and use that just fine. They also couldn’t be bothered to set up Signal for some reason, yet gladly accepted the suggestion to use the honey pot.
          I think that these people in my circle don’t care about security at all and only care about the platform. If it’s “secure”, “private” and “censorship resistant” and they haven’t heard of it until I, the “techie”, explain the technological benefits of it, they’ll think it’s a niche “techie” thing they’re not nerdy enough to understand. If I get them to use it, they’ll keep thinking this whenever something is slightly different than WhatsApp and be frustrated. Meanwhile they can get behind the honey pot because “WhatsApp doesn’t work there, this is just what people in that country use”. It appears normal because “normal people” use it all the time, and they’ll solve any inconvenience themselves because “normal people (can) use this, and I’m normal too”.

        • @shneancy@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Well i’m very happy for you and for them, but my 76 year old Polish grandmother - who got her first mobile phone at the age of 60ish, probably doesn’t even know what image quality is, definitely doesn’t know the difference between android and iOS, and has recently called me panicked to ask why all her photos were on Facebook, they weren’t, she was looking at her gallery preview through the Facebook app - is not going to be very enthusiastic about learning to use an app only her grandson uses.

          so I’ll just stick to messenger

  • Chris
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    348 months ago

    I am so numb to outrage that this just seems… Meh. What happened to me.

    • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ
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      188 months ago

      It’s the world we live in. It’s very much intentionally designed to make you complacent.

    • @AJ1@lemmy.ca
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      138 months ago

      yeah like tell me something I don’t know.

      “This just in: to the surprise of no one, your phone has, in fact, been spying on you from day 1. Now we go to Jim with sports. Jim?”

      • Chris
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        18 months ago

        This is such a strange reality to live in. All of the futuristic, dystopian fiction I have consumed has the same premise that people living in the dystopia know it and know it’s bad. Somehow reality is worse.

  • @Snapz@lemmy.world
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    338 months ago

    What’s the last “bombshell scandal that would ruin a company” that actually ruined a company?

    • @SulaymanF@lemmy.world
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      48 months ago

      Unroll.me was a service that would scan your email and clean up your inbox. The New York Times reported that the company was gathering sales receipts emails, anonymizing them, and selling them to rival companies; for example Uber paid them to hand over all the sales receipts they could on Lyft rides in people’s mailboxes. The bad press made them eventually sell the company to Slice, mainly for the email archives they amassed.

  • @Suavevillain@lemmy.world
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    328 months ago

    This is why I don’t like the push of everything needing an app. I sure do wish people in congress cared about this type of privacy issues the way they did Tiktok.

    • @Blackdoomax@sh.itjust.works
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      288 months ago

      But before that, when it was not acknowledged by social media, it was more like ’ you’re paranoid. And you think you’re that important that they listen to you? Common, get back to reality ’

      • @endofline@lemmy.ca
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        8 months ago

        Yeah, being not paranoid is hard in XXI century.

        TBH the same scenario has been mentioned in the “ex machina” movie from 2014 when colleb has been asking how the humanoid robots work. The deep blue was AI of search engine taking data from listening to the phone calls

      • @JovialMicrobial@lemm.ee
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        8 months ago

        I feel like we’ve been gaslighted so bad about this that we were even denying each other’s reality.

        I knew they had to be doing this so I turned off all mic permissions. One day it pissed me off so much I started keeping my phone off completely unless I needed to use it.

        The only good thing that came out of it was I learned about ad blockers. Fine, listen to me since I can’t fucking stop you(keeping phone off was inconvenient), but it’s futile now and you wasted money since I won’t see your stupid fucking ads anymore.

    • @dev_null@lemmy.ml
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      18 months ago

      It’s the reverse. Non tech people believe the snake oil, tech people know this is snake oil.

    • @Agent641@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      The future is going to be amazing! Well, it has the potential to be amazing if we use tech the right way. No I mean, like in an ethical way. Without exploiting people. No not like that, in a way that helps people. Well yes, billionaires are people, but I meant… at least it should be in legal ways. Or at least policed. Not hostile to average people. Not an openly criminal endeavour. Maybe just dont criminalise resistance to it? … oh, actually the future is going to be a techno-monopolistic dark age, I see. We can pivot to covering that.

    • @Valmond@lemmy.world
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      48 months ago

      Yeah that’s a shame, electronics seems to have reached a level where most people just don’t need or dream of a better something (PC, phone, etc) and other tech is hard to grasp like biotech.

  • Subverb
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    8 months ago

    These companies absolutely do use your microphone to listen.

    My wife and I have tested this and you can too.

    Have a conversation near your phones about purchasing something offbeat. We used a kitchen garbage disposal in our test. Talk about them for a few minutes, about needing to buy one, different brands, etc.

    Almost immediately you’ll be served garbage disposal adds.

      • @Duamerthrax@lemmy.world
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        98 months ago

        And there have been push back against the idea by naive, trusting people who think the toggles for that do anything. The fact that there’s leak conversations now of advertisers admitting they do it will sink any counter argument against it.

        Also, if advertisers are doing it, you can bet that the government can too.

        • @steeznson@lemmy.world
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          48 months ago

          I used to work in adtech and the most we could do was track locations. Even that didn’t work properly for our purposes because most shops are in malls where several different stores co-exist on the same coordinates. It only worked for outlets in retail parks which were separated from one another.

    • @grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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      8 months ago

      I even got an email out of nowhere right in my inbox from Dell the same day I was talking about Dell laptops with my book club. I would be so shocked if these examples are mere coincidence

      Having worked on the tech side of email marketing campaigns I would actually be impressed

      • @Warl0k3@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Setting aside confirmation bias (idk, because it’s boring?): So people you’re in a book club with, an established group which it is very easy to associate you with, were discussing Dell laptops… and you think it’s strange you got looped in? If three people from your book club all looked up dells later, or earlier, or etc. etc., why wouldn’t they figure you might also be interested in dell laptops? An approach that doesn’t require NLP of god only knows how much hypothetical audio taken from pockets, and works much better?

        • @grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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          18 months ago

          I’m just shocked that there are marketing departments that actually know what they’re doing. Granted I haven’t worked for any huge companies, so that’s probably why I have difficulty picturing it.

  • @gcheliotis@lemmy.world
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    168 months ago

    A market agency claiming they do something of the sort isn’t proof that conversations are being monitored en masse. Security researchers can and probably have tested for this and found no clear, verifiable evidence, otherwise we would have known. Also, this stuff can be blocked at the OS level and I find it hard to imagine (esp. without solid proof) that Google or Apple would jeopardize their reputations to this extent by enabling such unauthorized listening in on users’ conversations.

    Of course it’s good to keep watching this space but we shouldn’t jump to conclusions.

  • @AgentGrimstone@lemmy.world
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    138 months ago

    There were whole threads of people saying this stuff doesn’t happen. They would say it just didn’t make sense that companies would do this, it’s not worth it to them. That all the ads I was seeing at convenient times were just a coincidence.

    • @vxx@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      I have my camera and microphone deactivated on the OS level because Youtube and Spotify would show me things workmates mentioned way too often.

      I didn’t notice it since.

      Could still be a major coincidence though, the biggest of them.

    • @PrimeMinisterKeyes@lemmy.world
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      68 months ago

      The next iteration of gaslighting is already here: That it’s no big deal anyway since you can just use an ad blocker. Riiight, let’s all just turn our eyes away to make the monster go away. Surely, it’ll get bored and stop listening and recording, and surely, it will not sell its collected data off to banks, insurance providers, the government, law enforcement… right?

    • @dev_null@lemmy.ml
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      58 months ago

      And they are right. This company is full of shit. Show me any proof the tech from the deleted advert actually existed.

    • @DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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      8 months ago

      There are simps in this thread trying to say “uuuuhmmmm AKSHUALLY it’s not Facebook directly” like that’s fucking relevant to the problem.