I’m so angry and want to write more about this, but I also want to get a @better update out today (going to try to smash those trackers before they get to you.) In short: TRACKING IS BAD and invasive. Consent dialogs are not good enough for consent, let alone opt-out options. Discrimination based on tracking impacts marginalised and vulnerable people first and most. Yet 99% of the web is complicit in it. Go check yourselves.
Given that Apple have just removed Do Not Track from Safari because it was being used for tracking via “fingerprinting”, the decision to add trackability for assistive tech is *baffling.*
Looking forward to Think About! conference. It’s designed to be properly inclusive, has some great-sounding talks in the lineup, and me and @aral are doing our first ever keynote *together.* Only a couple of weeks left on “regular bird” tickets: https://think-about.io/en/speakies/laura_kalbag_and_aral_balkan.html
It’s unbelievable (and yet so believable) that my Irish car insurance provider is giving me more useful and decisive advice around Brexit than the UK government.
Can’t wait to read Everyday Information Architecture and learn more from Lisa Maria Martin. If you work in anything that touches the web, this book will be indispensable. Pre-order it now!
@switchingsocial@coffeentacos@better@aral Better has one (free and open) blocking rule list, curated by us with the aim to protect your privacy and enforce the principles of our ethical design manifesto (https://ind.ie/ethical-design/). This also means we can fix issues with specific sites/update rules based on reported problems. The app is designed to be easy for anyone to use, so you can just install the app and forget about it (no switches or choices to be made.) Hope that helps!
“We, by way of our platforms, give agency and credence to these acts of violence, then pilfer profits from them. Tech is a money-making accomplice to these hate crimes.”
@Tatianamac writes so clearly and powerfully, also giving us real guidance for action. Stop what you’re doing and read this:
I’m sick of playing weekly whack-a-mole with nasty trackers on popular sites. If a site is trying this hard to invade our privacy & extract our personal information, we should stop visiting them, regulate them as malware, shut them down, and fire everyone responsible into the sun.
@aperezdc yeah, we’ve tried that before, and it’s just too much maintenance. I think it’s a long-shot to find something that is both privacy-respecting and easy to use.
@dosch haha, I appreciate you trying! It’s just not worth setting up a WP site, with all the associated difficulties of WP sites (I used to use WP a lot.) Most of the plugins are full of tracking (including WP’s own.) It might be a hopeless cause right now…
What’s the state of email newsletter services nowadays? Is there any service differentiating itself on being privacy-respecting? (No tracking/analytics/short URLs.) I’ve been looking, but all the services I find seem to be all about maximum-tracking. *sigh*
THIS is the rallying cry I needed on a Monday morning…
“But if we are going to talk about smashing patriarchy and dismantling systems of oppression (as we should!), we need to understand the role of surveillance and data exploitation in perpetuating and enhancing those systems”