Ares Wrote:It has everything to do with whether a foreign company is allowed to operate in the United States.
If a foreign company created an app that allowed you access to U.S. nuclear launch codes would it be your constitution right to have access to it?
so it would be ok if the company wasn't foreign ?? LOL
as I said, where a company is located has NOTHING to do with it
foreign or domestic, that would be a violation of national security -- being a foreign has nothing to do with it
LOL @ protecting 23andme
23andme hacked
https://arstechnica.com/security/2023/10...ing-spree/
"The posts claimed that 23andMe’s CEO was aware the company had been 'hacked' two months earlier and never revealed the incident.
The data included profile and account ID numbers, display names, gender, birth year, maternal and paternal haplogroups, ancestral heritage results, and data on whether or not each user has opted in to 23andme’s health data. Some of this data is included only when users choose to share it.
The Record also reported that the 23andMe website allows people who know the profile ID of a user to view that user’s profile photo, name, birth year, and location."
they were hacked, the ceo knew they were hacked and said nothing
and now the ceo blames it on users for not maintaining strong passwords LOL
ooh, but they're an American company -- so you're data is safe because they PROMISE it is
Quote:powering off your phone is easy.
the NSA and FBI can track phones even if they're off using malware
https://techpp.com/2013/08/22/track-phone-turned-off/
but even if the malware isn't installed you eventually have to turn the phone back on and then your location is known
Quote:I don't use the NYC subway or any public transportation
good for you
people who live in NYC don't have that option
nobody is going to walk 2 miles in the rain or in mid-winter to get to work
and the MTA is an AMERICAN company that operates the nyc public transit system and the can track you
Quote:Only if you are dumb enough to allow it and buy a car that is able to do this.
just about every new car allows this and those that don't will have the capability in the future
they will because car companies have incentive to do so -- they profit off of it -- that is capitalism -- capitalism is good, but this is one if the downsides
and as for "being dumb enough to allow it" -- how many people even know its happening ?
Quote:That is the entire point.
LOL, not its not
the whole point is my original assertion that being a foreign company has nothing to do with privacy
American companies will screw you over if there is a monetary incentive to do so
being foreign or domestic has nothing to do with it
and if you think your information is safe just because you're dealing with an american company then you don't understand capitalism and the willingness of companies to make a profit by selling your data
Quote:[b]Do you have a constitutional right to access a black market dark website in Eastern Europe that sells credit card numbers of U.S. Citizens?[
so you're asking if someone has the constitutional right to do something illegal ?
and what does it matter that its in Eastern Europe ???
what difference would it make if it was in Russia or California or Mississippi ?
it does NOT matter if it is a foreign country
Quote:It is not about restricting American's rights it is about whether the federal government has the power to allow foreign companies to operate in the United States or not.
it is exactly about restricting american's rights
the us government is only upset that they are not the ones collecting the data
Authorities reportedly ordered Google to reveal the identities of some YouTube videos' viewers
https://www.engadget.com/authorities-rep...18019.html
https://www.reddit.com/r/privacy/comment...d_certain/
and this was sealed, so how many unsealed requests do we not know about