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People sign up to app intended to share personal information about others without their permission, end up having their own personal information shared without permission - the irony is impressive.

Technology
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  • People sign up to app intended to share personal information about others without their permission, end up having their own personal information shared without permission - the irony is impressive.

  • People sign up to app intended to share personal information about others without their permission, end up having their own personal information shared without permission - the irony is impressive.

    At first I was going to call bullshit because I thought you were exaggerating and being ridiculous.

    Nope. That's the app. "Anonymous" sharing of pictures and info of other people. Presumably without their permission. That's fucked up.

  • At first I was going to call bullshit because I thought you were exaggerating and being ridiculous.

    Nope. That's the app. "Anonymous" sharing of pictures and info of other people. Presumably without their permission. That's fucked up.

    Yeah. I mean, I get it. The concept of the app makes sense. And I would be that, on average, it is/would be used for good.

    On the other hand, as a guy, the idea that people are out there sharing reviews of me as a person on the open internet, and I have no way of knowing this, is deeply unsettling. Like, I haven't done anything wrong - just the whole concept feels very gross.

  • Yeah. I mean, I get it. The concept of the app makes sense. And I would be that, on average, it is/would be used for good.

    On the other hand, as a guy, the idea that people are out there sharing reviews of me as a person on the open internet, and I have no way of knowing this, is deeply unsettling. Like, I haven't done anything wrong - just the whole concept feels very gross.

    You could ask someone you know to register and share the login, it's a flawed concept. There's probably a bunch of partners in there who didn't even know their boyfriend used their info to create an account to check on themselves.

  • Yeah. I mean, I get it. The concept of the app makes sense. And I would be that, on average, it is/would be used for good.

    On the other hand, as a guy, the idea that people are out there sharing reviews of me as a person on the open internet, and I have no way of knowing this, is deeply unsettling. Like, I haven't done anything wrong - just the whole concept feels very gross.

    Especially because the app is called "tea", like the slang term for gossip. The letter of the intention may have been good but the whole thing is toxic.

  • People sign up to app intended to share personal information about others without their permission, end up having their own personal information shared without permission - the irony is impressive.

    I think it depends on people's intent and purpose for using this service. I'm overall not a fan of someone taking and sharing pictures of me without my consent, or making claims that can't be defended...

    The group of women legitimately using it for safety is fine, in a general sense.

    The group of women using it as gossip and entertainment is not.

  • Yeah. I mean, I get it. The concept of the app makes sense. And I would be that, on average, it is/would be used for good.

    On the other hand, as a guy, the idea that people are out there sharing reviews of me as a person on the open internet, and I have no way of knowing this, is deeply unsettling. Like, I haven't done anything wrong - just the whole concept feels very gross.

    Sucks it's necessary.

    You want women to not just assume youre an insane violent rape monster? Shit like this is how we know. Edit: the women who used this app were the ones who didn't want to asdume you were all subhuman filth, who wanted to protect themselves from the 'few bad apples' without doing splash damage, as they saw it, to the rest of you. And it looks like those naive idiots got proven wrong. There is no way to be safe as a woman or woman categorized person wirh men in your life, except for rare and astounding luck.

    Or you could, like, fix your entire gender; idk. I'm still going to hate all of you.

  • I think it depends on people's intent and purpose for using this service. I'm overall not a fan of someone taking and sharing pictures of me without my consent, or making claims that can't be defended...

    The group of women legitimately using it for safety is fine, in a general sense.

    The group of women using it as gossip and entertainment is not.

    Considering that "tea" is common slang for gossip I'm not convinced there was many of the latter.

  • Yeah. I mean, I get it. The concept of the app makes sense. And I would be that, on average, it is/would be used for good.

    On the other hand, as a guy, the idea that people are out there sharing reviews of me as a person on the open internet, and I have no way of knowing this, is deeply unsettling. Like, I haven't done anything wrong - just the whole concept feels very gross.

    My problem is how it's implemented.

    An app where you simply post a name and a location, and then people can DM you with their experiences directly, would be a lot less invasive.

  • I think it depends on people's intent and purpose for using this service. I'm overall not a fan of someone taking and sharing pictures of me without my consent, or making claims that can't be defended...

    The group of women legitimately using it for safety is fine, in a general sense.

    The group of women using it as gossip and entertainment is not.

    It makes sense using it for safety, but I would worry about whether all the information on there is accurate. Most of the feedback on the app is probably negative, I doubt anyone would really post anything on Tea that's positive about their former partner. But people like to believe they are in the right. Someone who got in a fight with their partner might post something on Tea that isn't accurate, but makes them feel better since they can spin the story how they want, and make the other person at fault. However, unlike regular social media, the person being attacked by their partner on Tea has no idea that it happened, and no way to refute what was said. It promotes the opposite of any type of communication between partners after a fight or breakup.
    It promotes safety, but at the same time it promotes some toxicity in relationships. What would you think if you knew that if your got into a disagreement with your partner that you could end up posted on this app, without any way of arguing back?

  • Never upload PII to social media

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    Niemand hat geantwortet
  • EU Gives Platforms 12 Months to Deploy 'Strict' Age Verification

    Technology technology
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    lena@gregtech.euL
    Source? I can't find the article.
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    E
    Yeah I'm afraid we're gonna miss the boat on this one too just like we did with social media, we learned nothing.
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    tal@lemmy.todayT
    You don't, but it's considerably quieter to use a liquid cooler on current high-end CPUs because of the amount of heat they dissipate. My current CPU has a considerably higher TDP than my last desktop's. I finally broke down and put an AIO cooler on the new one, and all the fans on the radiator can run at a much lower speed than my last CPU because the radiator is a lot larger than one hanging directly off the CPU, can dump heat to the air a lot more readily. The GPU on that system, which doesn't use liquid cooling, has to have multiple slots and a supporting rail to support the weight because it has a huge heatsink hanging on a PCI slot that was never intended to support that kind of load, and the fans are far more spun up when it heats up. The amount of power involved these days is getting pretty high. My early PCs could manage with entirely passive cooling, just a heatsink. Today, the above CPU dumps 250W and the above GPU 400W. I have a small space heater in the same room that, on low, runs at 400W. Frankly, if I had a convenient mounting point in the case for the radiator, with the benefit of hindsight, I'd seriously have considered sticking an AIO liquid-cooled GPU in there --- there are a few manufacturers that do those. The GPU is a lot louder than the CPU when both are spun up. I will kind of agree on the RGB LEDs, though. It's getting obnoxiously difficult to find desktop hardware that doesn't have those. My last build, I was having difficulty finding DIMMs that didn't have RGB LEDs; not normally a component that I think of anyone wanting to make visible. I'm kind of wondering whether we'll get to the point where one just has a standard attachment point for liquid and just hooks the hardware's attachment into a larger system that circulates fluid. Datacenters would become quiet places.
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    V
    Oh absolutely. The NV equivalent is priced at multiple millions of dollars. If you can get it.
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    I think it's more about the legal distinction between drawn and 'real' porn. TBH "negligently letting children watch it" seems like a sensless statement to me. The onus should be on parents to filter their kids' internet environments, not literally every accessible site on the open internet (which are never going to comply with a patchwork of age verification regs).
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    L
    That's data collection versus an active public profile.
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    https://spinoff.nasa.gov/FINDER-Finds-Its-Way-into-Rescuers-Toolkits