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@Wetrix "Although no immediate action was taken by German authorities on Thursday against Apple or Amazon— two companies that have both been found to listen in on their users — the commissioner's report "invited" the companies "swiftly review" their policies and procedures."

The only voice assistant I trust is Mycroft. Still waiting for the mark II to be completed though.

@Wetrix @eff 's coverage from July 19th is still my favorite on this subject

Don’t Let Encrypted Messaging Become a Hollow Promise eff.org/deeplinks/2019/07/dont

@switchingsocial@mastodon.at unglue.it/landing/ is worth looking at too. It helps authors release their books under Creative Commons by letting readers buy their books. Got there when searching for an eBook version of Burning Up

I too have wondered why unsubscribing from a marketing email list could take days to process, and now that I know, I wish I could have the wonder back.

hoot: https://twitter.com/Joe8Bit/status/1156312965265707013

@Joe8Bit: I saw a tweet asking why sometimes when you unsubscribe from an email list it says it can ‘take a few days’. Buckle up, as I have a RIDICULOUS story about this happening in The Enterprise<img>...

@Joe8Bit: There’s a bank. Let’s assume you’ve heard of them, in fact if you’re in the UK there’s a 10 in 1 chance they’re YOUR bank. I was an overpayed ‘consultant’ at this bank.

@Joe8Bit: This bank sends marketing emails. There’s a little ‘unsubscribe’ link at the bottom of the mail. People often click it.

@Joe8Bit: When they do it calls an antique web service that runs ‘somewhere’ at the bank. Honestly, it took me 3 weeks to find out where.

@Joe8Bit: This web service sends an email to an internal email address every time it’s clicked. This happens 100s of times a day.

@Joe8Bit: This email was originally sent to an individual. They left the bank five years before.

@Joe8Bit: This mail address is now forwarded to an email group. They couldn’t change the address as it’s hard coded and they don’t have the code that was used to compile this Java 6 service.

@Joe8Bit: This email group is monitored by two people in the banks offshore centre in Hyderabad. They worked super hard and always SMASHED their job; but holy crap it was soul crushing.

@Joe8Bit: When I spoke to them via VC they had the Enterprise 1000 Yard Stare. They’ve banged their head against this thing for YEARS and it’s NEVER changed.

@Joe8Bit: When they get a mail, they need to run a SQL query to see if that mail address is associated with a customer (which results in one process) or if it’s not (which results in a separate process)

@Joe8Bit: If they’re a customer, they execute another SQL query that updates a customer record in a type of ETL staging area. Every one of these changes is reviewed (at 4pm UK time) by a team in an office in Scotland. If they approve it, it gets executed 24 hours LATER at 4pm

@Joe8Bit: If this person is NOT a customer, they add it to an excel and email it (just before they go home) to a marketing team in Swindon.

@Joe8Bit: The marketing team use tea leaves and chicken bones to decide if this person is a ‘high vale prospect’ (their ‘SLA’ is ‘within 48 hours’). If they AREN’T they add the address to another excel and email the original team in India. They use their ‘process’ to execute a SQL query

@Joe8Bit: If they ARE a ‘high value prospect’ the marketing team MANUALLY sends an email asking if they REALLY REALLY want to unsubscribe? It looks like an automated email, but it ain’t.

@Joe8Bit: If they answer yes (they had to literally reply ‘YES’) then the team in Swindon send a THIRD excel back to India and the ceremonial SQL queries are run.

@Joe8Bit: IIRC this took FOUR BUSINESS DAYS on average. On average ~700 people unsubscribed a day and ~70% of those were deemed ‘high value prospects’.

@Joe8Bit: There’s another story about how the two people from India joined our engineering team and became the Product Owners for the thing that replaced it <img>

@Joe8Bit: They were also two of the nicest, most caring, hardest working people I've ever had the opportunity to work with. They were the reason why this awful corporate clusterfuck of a process worked so 'smoothly' for all those years.

@Joe8Bit: If those things didn't make an ideal, A+ candidate to own the replacement system I don't know what did.

@Joe8Bit: They eventually moved to the UK, and one of them is now in charge of a team of 40+ people!

@Joe8Bit: Why had they been ignored and overlooked for so long, and why every bit of their work needed to be 'checked' by a team in the UK… you'll need to fill in the gaps on that one-oh wait no, it was prejudice against offshore workers and a light sparkling of racism! <img>

@Joe8Bit: My consigliere have informed me I should take advantage of this sudden attention to mention @permutive is hiring! We’re like, cool to work for and stuff <img>

@Wetrix @jj aren't you glad Google+ didn't take off then (or the Facebook phone flop from a few years ago).

But yeah, at some point I'm going to need to flash /e/ or Lineage on my phone, only way to avoid Google tracking. Right now it seems less bad to use Google Fi then using T-mobile though. We need a privacy-friendly MVNO

@Wetrix @greyor NewsBlur is for web, iOS and Android, so yes.

I never said I use Pocket for work. I just said I doubt its recommendations will be as good if it has the 2+ billion people Facebook has

@jj @Wetrix that might be too severe though. On Android you can (eg with NetGuard) cut off apps' Internet access completely, and between permissions and apps like Island you can restrict their access to your data.

(Personal experience: I need to have WeChat installed, which is even worse, but it effectively can't see anything on my phone, just what I send there)

I find this napkin from my flight so alarming that I saved it to put on my wall as a reminder of the value of copywriters.

@Wetrix @greyor I use Pocket too. Agreed it's mostly legit but probably just a function of the userbase at the moment. If every Facebook user is on it I shudder to think what articles will start trending!

NewsBlur is quite nice too. It's actually open source so you can self-host if you're so inclined. So I ended up paying for that and donating to Mozilla directly rather than paying for Pocket

@greyor @Wetrix ironically, I got acquainted with a lot of really bad "news" sites through Google News. Both right wing sources as well as sensationalist ones. So yeah, always check the source.

Tech Support: A Limerick

You have a few problems computing,
And call them for help troubleshooting.
"I'm sorry" they say,
As you start to pray,
"But have you attempted rebooting?"

@Wetrix indeed. This is why we need open standards and open source, interoperable implementations (Signal meets two of those but don't have interoperability, Telegram is only open source on the client side and has poor E2E support... maybe Matrix is the future if only it's more user friendly)

@greyor @farhan I started doing this too when I was on vacation. The lack of screen mirroring in OsmAnd means I use OSM less when I'm home, but it's probably time to start again. Quite impressed by how easy it is to edit, less so by the process of uploading images via Mapillary

@switchingsocial@mastodon.at feedbooks.com is also a great source for public-domain and DRM-free ebooks. Narrower public domain selection than Gutenberg but much better typesetting, and for books they sell they indicate the DRM status

Someone from Cisco went on stage to propose weakening TLS 1.3 for "network-based security solutions" (enterprise spyware).

There was a long line at the mic of people pushing back on it... I almost felt bad for the poor speaker 🙂

tools.ietf.org/html/draft-camw

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