Leave car keys by the front door to avoid home invasion, Toronto police officer says by Smalls in news

[–]Drewski 7 insightful - 2 fun7 insightful - 1 fun8 insightful - 2 fun -  (0 children)

Also leave your daughter's window unlocked, just give them what they want and they'll go away. Do not, under any circumstances, attempt to defend yourself or your family.

Taking a break. by Zapped in whatever

[–]Drewski 5 insightful - 1 fun5 insightful - 0 fun6 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

Understandable, hope it helps you out and also hope to see you around before too long. Thanks for all your help with the spam, I'm sure we'll manage.

Heat Death of the Internet by PanzersGhost in Internet

[–]Drewski 5 insightful - 1 fun5 insightful - 0 fun6 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

I don't disagree with the overall point he's making here, so maybe I'm being pedantic by highlighting how most of these can be overcome by conscious effort.

You want to order from a local restaurant, but you need to download a third-party delivery app, even though you plan to pick it up yourself. The prices and menu on the app are different to what you saw in the window. When you download a second app the prices are different again. You ring the restaurant directly and it says the number is no longer in service. You go to the restaurant and order in person. You mention that their website has the wrong number and the woman behind the counter says they have to contact the company who designed the site for changes, which will cost them, but most people just order through an app anyway.

There are plenty of restaurants with working phone numbers, use one of those instead. Bonus points for telling the offending restaurant why you won't be ordering from them.

You want to watch the trailer for an upcoming movie on YouTube but you first have to sit through an ad. Then you sit through a preview for the trailer itself. Then you watch the trailer, which is literally another ad. When it ends, it cues up a new trailer, with a new ad at the start of it.

Use a web frontend for Youtube like Piped or Invidious. Or one of the many unofficial apps that block ads such as FreeTube, Newpipe and SmartTube. Or download videos directly using a tool like yt-dlp.

The first page of Google results are links to pages that have scraped other pages for information from other pages that have been scraped for information. All the sources seem to link back to one another. There is no origin. The photos on the page look weird. The hands are disfigured. There is no image credit.

Search engines have certainly gotten worse, and will continue to decline as more AI content floods the net. You can get better results for now if you're willing to pay for a search engine like Kagi, or Searxng if you have time to tinker.

Your coworker sends you a PowerPoint pack to support a presentation you are giving to the executive committee, but you can’t make heads or tails of it. You call them over Zoom and they tell you they used ChatGPT to write it. You point out that it is near-unreadable, and they ask what specifically is wrong with it. You mention that, for starters, there are too many words on each slide. They tell you they’ll take care of it. They send you a new pack within the hour saying they asked ChatGPT to remove 30% of the text. It makes even less sense. You tell them you’ll just rewrite it yourself.

Your coworker is dumb, can't help too much with this one.

A billionaire got mad, bought your favourite social media site and ran it into the ground. A different billionaire got mad, bought the magazine site you liked to read on your lunchbreak and shut it down completely. A third billionaire did what they do best, bought the app you use for networking and sold it off for parts.

Seems inevitable with centralized social media. I've witnessed the rise and fall of digg, reddit and many others. Start using and promoting decentralized and federated social media such as Mastodon, Lemmy/Kbin, Nostr and others.

You want to watch a TV show from your youth so you check a streaming service, but it is not there, so you check a second streaming service but it is not there, so you check a third streaming service and it is not there. You search for it on Blu-ray but it doesn’t exist, so you search for it on DVD but it is out of print. You find a seller on eBay who has it, but the listing reads ambiguous as to whether it is the real thing or a burnt copy. You message the seller and they reply with an automated response thanking you for your interest.

Gabe Newell (Valve Corporation, Steam software) famously said that piracy is an issue of service, not price. Netflix started out as a great alternative to cable television but now all these streaming services are trying to suck as much profit out of the viewer as possible in a race to the bottom. Time to sail the seven seas, and make these corporations earn our subscriptions again.

You can’t read the recipe on your phone because it prioritises the ads on the page. You bring your laptop into the kitchen and whenever you scroll down, you have to close a pop-up. You turn AdBlock on and the page no longer loads, then AdBlock sends you an ad asking for money.

Your adblocker shouldn't be asking you for money, use uBlock Origin instead.

The Airbnb charges you a $150 cleaning fee, but insists the place needs to be left spotless. There will be a fee if the bedding hasn’t been stripped and the dishwasher hasn’t been emptied.

Airbnbs have declined significantly over past years. What used to be a great bargain is often times not as good as a hotel for the same price or cheaper. If you must use AirBNB look over the listing to see if there are any unreasonable cleaning requirements before booking.

Your Uber driver is lost because his app hasn’t updated and keeps telling him to turn down streets that no longer exist. You still give him five stars.

Never had this happen out of the many times I've used Uber, but not much you can do here I guess.

Your mother sends you a link to a breaking story, but the article is behind a paywall, so you switch to the website where you do pay for news but there’s no mention of it.

Use the bypass-paywalls browser plugin or archive.today website to get around paywalls.

You buy a microwave and receive ads for microwaves. You buy a mattress and receive ads for mattresses.

Why aren't you using uBlock origin?

Strangers on social media assume you are American and get mad when you correct them.

Internet people gonna internet.

Your Gmail is approaching storage capacity.

Stop using Gmail. Delete your old / unused messages.

Your smart TV needs new firmware.

Never connect your TV to the internet.

Your phone schedules an update.

Modern smartphones are computers, and computers need to be updated. Would you rather have an insecure device and get your data stolen? You can still buy an old dumb phone if it bothers you.

If your girlfriend made you listen to her play guitar for four hours every Saturday would this be a deal breaker? by Musky in AskSaidIt

[–]Drewski 4 insightful - 1 fun4 insightful - 0 fun5 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

She has a very pretty voice, but yeah 4 hours every single Saturday is a bit much. I'd probably grow to resent her guitar playing.

Fat, happy and healed: A movement toward fat liberation by Drewski in Health

[–]Drewski[S] 3 insightful - 1 fun3 insightful - 0 fun4 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

What are some of the dirt-cheapest food you can buy that will yield the most proteins? by TheBlackSun in Food

[–]Drewski 3 insightful - 1 fun3 insightful - 0 fun4 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

Chicken legs, tuna, lentils, beans + rice, peanut butter are all good options.

Three Girls Under 14 Charged With Killing Disabled Elderly Man by Drewski in news

[–]Drewski[S] 3 insightful - 1 fun3 insightful - 0 fun4 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

Is there any good family tree software for Linux Mint and Windows 7? by gloomy_bear in ancestry

[–]Drewski 3 insightful - 1 fun3 insightful - 0 fun4 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

https://alternativeto.net/category/home-and-family/genealogy/?platform=linux

I haven't used them, but maybe you'll find something here.

A Spy Site Is Scraping Discord and Selling Users’ Messages by Drewski in privacy

[–]Drewski[S] 3 insightful - 1 fun3 insightful - 0 fun4 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

An online service is scraping Discord servers en masse, archiving and tracking users’ messages and activity across servers including what voice channels they join, and then selling access to that data for as little as $5. Called Spy Pet, the service’s creator says it scrapes more than ten thousand Discord servers, and besides selling access to anyone with cryptocurrency, is also offering the data for training AI models or to assist law enforcement agencies, according to its website.

The news is not only a brazen abuse of Discord’s platform, but also highlights that Discord messages may be more susceptible to monitoring than ordinary users assume. Typically, a Discord user’s activity is spread across disparate servers, with no one entity, except Discord itself, able to see what messages someone has sent across the platform more broadly. With Spy Pet, third-parties including stalkers or potentially police can look up specific users and see what messages they’ve posted on various servers at once.

“Have you ever wondered where your friend hangs out on Discord? Tired of basic search tools like Discord.id? Look no further!” Spy Pet’s website reads. It claims to be tracking more than 14,000 servers, 600 million users, and includes a database of more than 3 billion messages.

💡

*Do you know anything else about people scraping Discord? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at +44 * * *. Otherwise, send me an email at **@.co.**

404 Media was unable to verify whether those figures are accurate, but did confirm the service is scraping messages from Discord servers and is making them and other user data available to paying customers. The service requires a minimum payment of around $5 in cryptocurrency, such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, or Monero. For that, customers are given 500 Spy Pet credits. An individual user lookup appears to cost 10 credits (10 cents), in 404 Media’s own tests. The creator told 404 Media in an email that the service has around 100 paying accounts, stretching between those with $5 of credits, up to $500.

After searching for a user, a page displays the servers they are a part of that Spy Pet has visibility into; any connected accounts such as their GitHub; a table containing their most recent messages (including the server name, a timestamp, and the message content itself); and a log of when they joined or left specific voice channels in a server. Users can also export a target’s chats into a .CSV file, according to our tests.

A screenshot of the tool. Redactions by 404 Media.

404 Media verified the messages are accurate by searching for a user on Spy Pet, viewing their messages on the service, then entering the Discord server they came from and finding the respective message there. 404 Media did this for multiple Discord users across multiple servers.

The list of impacted servers is dizzying. One Discord user 404 Media examined with Spy Pet’s tool showed they were a member of Minecraft themed servers, an Among Us fan server, and the official Runescape server. Another was a member of multiple cryptocurrency related servers. On a section of the website listing different servers, a total of more than 86,000 servers are included. Spy Pet does not appear to be actively collecting from many of those though, with a message reading “We have no bots in this server, so we aren't tracking it, but we know it exists.” The creator told 404 Media that the chances Spy Pet starts tracking these servers is “pretty low, though.” The service did fail to return data on some specific users that 404 Media looked up, meaning they likely weren’t in a server that Spy Pet had scraped.

A screenshot of the tool. Redactions by 404 Media.

There is no indication that Spy Pet has obtained private messages sent between individual Discord users. It appears Spy Pet is scraping channels inside Discord servers and then making those messages available to customers.

“I like scraping, archiving, and challenging myself,” the creator told 404 Media. “Discord is basically the holy grail of scraping, since Discord is trying absolutely anything to combat scraping.”

Channel messages sit in an unusual space when it comes to privacy. They are not direct messages, but they are not public in the same way a Twitter feed might be. Discord users may not expect that a bot can enter a server they frequent, download messages available to it, and then radically change the distribution of those messages by selling them to people who may not even be inside the server itself.

A comparable example is when a researcher publicly released a dataset in 2016 related to nearly 70,000 users of the dating site OkCupid, including their sexual turn-ons, sexual orientation, and more. That data was semi-public, as it was available to other OkCupid users but required a viewer to log into the site itself. Releasing it outside of OkCupid made it available to anyone. OkCupid filed a DMCA request against an upload of the data.

The site also advertises sale of its scraped data for other purposes. “Interested in training an AI model with Discord messages? Are you a group of federal agents looking for a new source of intel? Or maybe something else? We've got you covered. Contact us and let us know how we can help,” the website reads. Law enforcement would typically need to provide Discord with a legal order to obtain a users’ messages.

A screenshot of the tool. Redactions by 404 Media.

The creator told 404 Media that the intended use case for Spy Pet is similar to how Dutch police previously used a tool for Telegram that allowed them to track a cybercriminal across multiple chats at once. They also said intended customers could be people “interested in what their friends are up to” and people who engage in open source intelligence, or OSINT.

A Discord spokesperson said the company is currently investigating Spy Pet. “Discord is committed to protecting the privacy and data of our users. We are currently investigating this matter. If we determine that violations of our Terms of Service and Community Guidelines have occurred, we will take appropriate steps to enforce our policies. We cannot provide further comments as this is an ongoing investigation,” they said. As of Tuesday, the Spy Pet creator said they had not received any communications or legal threats from Discord itself.

While Spy Pet fundamentally changes the privacy of Discord’s users, with the service shifting their activity from a decentralized model to one where it can be viewed all at once, Spy Pet suggests it takes the privacy of its own users more seriously. “We prioritize your privacy as a user searcher. Your searches are secure and confidential,” the website reads.

At the bottom of the site, a button indicates people can “request removal.” After clicking that, a clip from Spiderman 2 (2004), in which J. Jonah Jameson laughs at Peter Parker, automatically plays.

“You’re serious?” Jameson says.

Silk Road Bitcoin Worth $2B Moved by U.S. Government by Drewski in cryptocurrency

[–]Drewski[S] 3 insightful - 1 fun3 insightful - 0 fun4 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

Bitcoin is not anonymous, check out Monero.

NYC sucker-punch victim dies after nearly 7 years in coma by Drewski in news

[–]Drewski[S] 3 insightful - 1 fun3 insightful - 0 fun4 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

Guyana president shuts down BBC reporter over climate change by Drewski in environment

[–]Drewski[S] 2 insightful - 2 fun2 insightful - 1 fun3 insightful - 2 fun -  (0 children)

Remember When pay Cable Television Was Supposed To Be Commercial-Free? by relative in whatever

[–]Drewski 2 insightful - 1 fun2 insightful - 0 fun3 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

Browsing the internet is a lot more tolerable with an adblocker.