u mad, state?
u mad, state?
u mad, state?
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Everytime someone says they don't have anything to hide I ask them what the pin of their phone is and to give me their phone. Suddenly that's something different...
I once asked a friend if he trusted the lock on his phone (brand new iPhone 15 Pro Max, latest and greatest). He told me he did. I asked him if I could use his phone while it was locked, and he told me "No, I don't trust you. You would probably hack it or something." That statement says two things:
By the way, here's a few fun gimmicks you can pull on iPhone users:
I can see why your friend would assume you could hack their phone based on how specific these steps are.
Me: graphene phone with notifications hidden until unlocked. No voice assistant whatsoever. I guess the only thing you can do is take pictures from lock screen but that's not really useful. It doesn't show gallery of previous photos.
Even default android has such settings. I can view what song I'm listening to, take new photos and theoretically take short notes(haven't figured out how it works) and that's it. Also since I disabled the Google assistant, they can't do anything with it too.
Ah that's cool. Had no idea you could disable google assistant without doing some weird stuff with your phone.
I disabled the speech detection and the button underneath my volume control. If I tap my home button for to long it still activates, but I don't use it.
There is a difference between having nothing to hide and not closing the door when talking a shit
What I'm hearing is that people have an inert desire for privacy, EVEN if they don't have anything to hide (what are you hiding in the toilet?) I don't see why that wouldn't extend into the digital realm....
And what is it?
A right to privacy? Not in my country, thank you very much.
The government has every right to watch you take a shit and if you don't acknowledge that then you must be conspiring to deprive us of our freedoms.