[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[libreplanet-discuss] The (Amost) Everything WeChat App
From: |
Mary-Anne Wolf |
Subject: |
[libreplanet-discuss] The (Amost) Everything WeChat App |
Date: |
Thu, 18 Aug 2016 19:54:45 +0000 (UTC) |
This is a video about an app in China, WeChat, which combines the functionality
(and thus the collected information) of multiple apps and websites as many
people use them in the USA.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/10/technology/china-homegrown-internet-companies-rest-of-the-world.html?smid=fb-nytimes&smtyp=cur&_r=0
While general privacy issues in existing apps and websites are not news to fans
of Libre software, the seriousness in more pervasive corporate and government
snooping within a single very large app might be news.
While it would be possible to design a crypto-currency-like or torrent-like
system which would make collecting unencryptable data about end users
technically impossible, offering such a thing gratis to its users might be a
problem for keeping bills paid without having any information to sell. Yet one
would be competing against gratis apps that sell collected information. That
is not to mention the possibility of different corporations exchanging and
integrating the information they collect, before they acquire each other.
Also not to mention that the governments who surveil their citizens and
residents using the collected data might make privacy respecting alternatives
illegal. Certainly people planning bombings, fraud, and other crimes that most
of us would agree should be crimes, would want to use the privacy so that they
are not discovered. Governments somehow ignore that criminals use cars, cell
phones, and airlines to do their deeds as well. There is already a precedent
for government attacking technology used for recreational drug sales. It seems
that some kinds of businesses are more equal than others if criminals use their
products.
So, what would a libre solution to this combination of problems look like?
Could privacy be a differentiator to talk enough people out of the Big Brother
all-pervasive apps? Would enough potential end users even care enough to
change what they use?
If something in the USA evolved to be as pervasive as WeChat, would a
privacy-respecting alternative even be practical? Some other countries have
more sensible laws about privacy. Would it work better to start that
technology somewhere else? But would Americans be allowed to use it?
Mary-Anne
- [libreplanet-discuss] The (Amost) Everything WeChat App,
Mary-Anne Wolf <=