this post was submitted on 03 Mar 2025
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Ahh good ol Rossmann lol. I love him but I hate watching his videos, he goes far too ranty and repeats himself, it becomes hard to extract the real points.
Case in point, the video at your timestamp starts with an After-Before-Whatever rant before getting into any of the meat XD
I think everyone is really missing the points here. It isn't just bad PR, it's so bad that it can only be intentional. They didn't just claim rights and put them back, they removed their pledges to not sell data. The conversation isn't focused on the net result, the loss of the pledge, it's diluted elsewhere.
Maybe they're selling data to governments under law? I'm sure they already have terminology that permits them to do things legally required of them (so they don't need you to give them further rights), and the general process for the tech industry is to protest against such government interference up until the point a contract is negotiated where the government pays for access. In fact, I think this is generally what's happened with other businesses when their canary statements have gone away, as was revealed in the Snowden leaks.
I think it holds entertainment value, but if you want to watch the video for informational purposes, yeah I agree :D
I stated my opinion about the statement here:
So like expand on it instead of deleting it...
Maybe it is kinda the same as when Google decided to get rid of the "don't be evil" statement...
That was exactly what I was thinking of. Although I think there were even better examples with proper canary statements going away in line with the business' alleged joining of the PRISM program.