US says troops were targeted with location data, as senator warns ad industry is a ‘national security threat’ (www.wyden.senate.gov)
from beep@piefed.world to privacy@lemmy.ml on 29 May 18:23
https://piefed.world/c/privacy/p/1158914/us-says-troops-were-targeted-with-location-data-as-senator-warns-ad-industry-is-a-nation

cross-posted from: piefed.world/…/us-says-troops-were-targeted-with-…

#privacy

threaded - newest

ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 29 May 18:30 next collapse

If only someone would have told them. I’m just amazed.

booscience@beehaw.org on 29 May 19:07 collapse

Right? Well well well, if it isn’t the consequences of your own predictable greed and corruption

dan1101@lemmy.world on 29 May 19:06 next collapse

Yes…that’s how big tech advertising industry works. It’s how Google and Facebook make billions. How do they not know this?

Steve@communick.news on 29 May 19:27 collapse

They’re old. They’re slow to adapt to paradigm shifts.
They were also lied to, and paid lots of money by these companies.

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 29 May 19:36 collapse

GET. FUCKED.

everything the us loses because of its panopticon is very deserving and moral.

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 29 May 19:45 collapse

i’m scrambling to obtain a router before the panopticon ban hits routers.

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 29 May 19:47 next collapse

make sure to get an openwrt compatible one. you are not gonna regret it.

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 29 May 20:04 collapse

i should i specified a mobile router. the prices on used/refurbished mobile routers are starting to rival brand new as inventories are starting to vanish because of the ban and i’m getting sick of my chinese phones getting blocked by american carriers.

i’m planning on doing openwrt/tomato/etc. too and the homework i’ve done so far suggests that supportable routers are a bit older so i suspect that i’ll have more leeway when it comes to the ban.

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 30 May 09:26 collapse

sad to hear you guys are blocking vendors entirely now. huaweis used to have imei spoofing options, and some fuckery to allow regular play store and play services to work (not that you should want it)

dunno how it is now with open fascism and play integrity going on. and i imagine you already explored these options but it doesn’t hurt to mention them.

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 31 May 19:12 collapse

not blocking vendors wholesale; rather more like blocking “non-compliant” devices that dis proportionally affect certain vendors.

and the privacy community is probably the best source for these options.

orca@orcas.enjoying.yachts on 29 May 20:20 collapse

I love my GL.iNet router. It runs OpenWRT. I swapped to it a few months ago after getting a service upgrade and having my ISP try to force an Eero upon me.

Edit: they sell mobile routers too iirc (saw your other message).

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 29 May 20:48 next collapse

Edit: they sell mobile routers too iirc (saw your other message).

thank you for mentioning this. GL.iNet’s mobile router didn’t show up in my searches and it instantly blows my top contenders out of the water.

orca@orcas.enjoying.yachts on 29 May 20:58 collapse

No problem! They’ve got quite a few of them, so hopefully something there works.

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 29 May 22:28 collapse

i wish they that they were american based or at least european or japanese; the money I’ve ended up flushing down the toilet on chinese mobile devices taught me the hard way that american carriers eventually ban them using technical excuses so counterfactual that the pretext is obvious to anyone who knows the tech.

still, though, i’m highly tempted considering that it both costs less than the nighthawk m7 and has WAY MORE features/capabilities, so i should still get atleast 3-5 years of use out it before it too gets blocked by at&t or t-mobile.

TiredTiger@lemmy.ml on 30 May 00:54 collapse

I’ve had one of GL.inet’s routers for over a year now and I’m really happy with it. I surprisingly did not have my ISP barking at me when I replaced my old one with it, which was a relief. I don’t use a mobile carrier for my home internet though, so I don’t know if they’re more picky about what you use.

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 31 May 18:49 collapse

so I don’t know if they’re more picky about what you use.

no one knows how picky they’re going to be 5-ish years from now because the borders of our self-imposed & AI-driven panopticon are going to be in a state of flux for at least another decade.

did your device come with openwrt?

TiredTiger@lemmy.ml on 31 May 22:15 collapse

I hear you about the panopticon - I figured getting a Gl.iNet router is some protection, as I know what’s running on it and I can keep all my network traffic behind a VPN with a killswitch. Of course, they could try to make those illegal down the road. Who knows.

GL.iNet’s devices come with their own fork of OpenWRT pre-installed. The UI is easy to navigate and it does everything I need it to, so I haven’t felt any need to install OpenWRT proper, but if you want to, I believe you can easily find instructions to do so online.

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 01 Jun 18:42 collapse

do they share the fork that they’re using on github/gitea/codeberg/etc. that you know of?

Of course, they could try to make those illegal down the road. Who knows.

that’s the clever part; they don’t have to make it illegal because the american carriers are self-censoring themselves for pre-compliance and (i suspect) to minimize any controversy/publicity/awareness about it.

TiredTiger@lemmy.ml on 01 Jun 20:04 collapse

They have a lot on their github, but I have no idea if it’s current: github.com/orgs/gl-inet/repositories

If my ISP tries banning my router, I’ll be finding a new ISP. Of course, that’s not going to help if they all fall in line.

TiredTiger@lemmy.ml on 29 May 22:06 next collapse

Seconding this for anyone looking to buy one. Their pre-installed OpenWRT firmware is easy enough to use, and you can also set up AdGuard Home on some models (like a pi-hole but on your router).

I would never, ever use the router or modem an ISP tries to stick you with. They charge you monthly for those, for one thing. I wouldn’t be surprised if they had monitoring stuff on them, for another.

orca@orcas.enjoying.yachts on 30 May 02:57 collapse

I have AdGuard setup on mine! Worth it and dead simple to configure.

stink@lemmygrad.ml on 29 May 22:47 next collapse

Saying from experience, but if you work from home you may get flagged by shoddy IT rules for using a Gl.iNet device since their routers are regularly used for residential proxies, and they also sell IP-KVMs that IT doesn’t like.

orca@orcas.enjoying.yachts on 30 May 02:58 collapse

I haven’t encountered any issues with work IT yet. Our IT team is pretty on point, so it wouldn’t surprise me if I wasn’t the only one that owned a GL.iNet. In fact, someone at work may have recommended them to me lmao.

PolarKraken@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 30 May 06:36 collapse

Another recommendation for GL.iNet - been running one for a year and a half or so.

Whole house VPN via Mullvad was extremely easy to configure, for instance. As well as setting up an isolated “guest” network for fussy and sus devices (AKA no VPN for that).

You’ll love it!