well i suppose it depends on how deep your personal security goes. are your passwords stored on your device? are they stored securely? do you have a password manager? do you have a standalone app for your password manager and not a browser extension? is the master password for your password manager stored on any of your devices? do you have any settings that automatically locks your PC upon inactivity? is the pin for your PC related to you personally in any way? i get what you're saying because at the end of the day physical access IS pretty hard to mitigate. but you'd be surprised how far simple steps can take you.
there's plenty of reason to hate it but, to be absolutely clear, paid reddit posts are rarely conspiracy. that is a very popular method on reddit specifically. that isn't to say that "marathon devs definitely paid people to post on reddit" etc. just to say, it's a little difficult to immediately dismiss that as a concept when it's so fucking common on reddit.
no, the choice is either learn the ways you can avoid and work against spyware like buying hardware that can be bootloader unlocked from now on, or submit yourself to a fate of just accepting whatever corporate america wants to do to you i guess
this is yet another fork in the road for all the "Apple better than Google Apple more private" people. will you move the goalposts again or will you finally admit you just think everything is pretty and don't actually care about security?
(Google is also bad btw. they both are, in fact for the same reasons. believe it or not, ALL billion dollar corporations only see you as a walking bag of money. no matter what their marketing or privacy policy says)
oh, well when i go to that community it says nothing is there?