The title says it all. Part of what i do now is to convince people to care about their privacy. I know I cannot force people to do anything. And I have a charisma level of -1, if this was an rpg. Like its nonnexistent.

I feel lonely in general because it feels like people make me feel like I’m delusional for caring about protecting my privacy. Maybe there is a support group for that🤣🤣🤣

But anything I can specifically say that works best in planting a seed in people’s mind?

  • @Tenkard@lemmy.ml
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    06 hours ago

    I just compare it to having a stalker. Imagine being in your bedroom and having someone looking at you from outside the window. Now, would you be ok with it if the person was invisible?

  • @communism@lemmy.ml
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    06 hours ago

    I think if you just publicly practise decent privacy, people will be more inclined to do the same. e.g. all my friends know I’m not on WhatsApp and don’t use proprietary software in general. They know to talk to me on other platforms, and the fact that I’m like this means that others will likely feel more able to do the same if they are inclined. Nobody ever told me to care about privacy; I have always thought it was creepy if others can see all my personal business. I can’t imagine that that’s such a rare innate mindset to have, so other people who feel the same way should feel more able to put that into practice if they see you doing so. If they really want to broadcast all their personal data to the state and tech companies then they are within their right to, and I don’t see the point in trying to convince them to not do what they want to do.

  • DominusOfMegadeus
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    06 hours ago

    People never want to be convinced of anything that says they should do something differently than how they currently do it. Best you can do is lead by example. Talk about benefits of your way of doing things if they ask, or if it is very relevant to the conversation. Otherwise, don’t broach those topics. To take it a step further, if people start complaining to you about problems, before you offer solutions, ask them if they are just venting, or if they are looking for advice or suggestions. Now that you have your instructions on how to change what you are doing, please follow them to the letter, without deviation ;P

    • James R Kirk
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      05 hours ago

      Well said, I was thinking maybe the entire reason OPs charisma is -1 is because they’re out there trying to convince people to do something instead of just doing their own thing.

  • @snek_boi@lemmy.ml
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    07 hours ago

    We share the goal of making the world more private. I’m not trying to be cheeky or mean. I’m genuinely curious. Would you be against reading to learn how to talk more compellingly?

  • @doubtingtammy@lemmy.ml
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    09 hours ago

    If you’re in the US, you could point to the news. Even garden variety libs should be a little nervous about the increasing police state

  • qyron
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    010 hours ago

    Start by your own privacy.

    I boarded that train about twenty years ago. I tried the evangelizing route. I failed miserably. Which led me to care for myself first and foremost.

    I started by abandoning Windows. Not of my own volition; I bought a computer that had no OS. Enter Linux. None of my family, friends or acquaintances understood. It was all about the convinience. When my machines started outperforming while outliving theirs, it caused a ripple.

    Then came the usual slew of questions: where can I get a free anti-virus, office, media reader, whatever? That was when I introduced FOSS. After the initial resistance, things just settled into place. LibreOffice works. VLC works. PeaZip works. Thunderbird works. Etc.

    When smartphones became a thing, I started moving as fast as I could towards FOSS. This made things a bit more laughable as “free” android applications are ubiquous. But they fill your phone with junk and adds. While my apps provided me ease of use, safety, security and privacy.

    But when push came to shove, I just refused to join. First I left FBMessenger. I never boarded Whatsapp. I never entered Instagram or any major social networks. I discovered Signal and remained there.

    It’s my way or no way.

  • Autonomous User
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    10 hours ago

    But anything I can specifically say that works best in planting a seed in people’s mind?

    ‘It fails to include a libre software license text file. We do not control it, anti-libre software. Don’t fall for that scam.’

    You need to make them ask you. People are bored of privacy. They will not ask about privacy. Also, people care less about getting and more about losing. Listen for complains and always link back to software freedom.

    Here’s more: https://lemmy.world/post/21620691

  • @piyuv@lemmy.world
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    011 hours ago

    One thing I love about Germany is that people have this understanding where privacy is fundamental and not something to argue about. Because they know being able to easily identify people leads to disaster. It’s just about a political swing away.

  • @guest@feddit.org
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    011 hours ago

    I typically point to the real world and that seems to work:

    • Your garden has a fence
    • Your windows have curtains so that you close when you switch on the lights inside
    • Your bathroom window uses frosted glass so that you cannot be seen showering from outside
    • You sometimes whisper so that not everyone can hear what you say

    None of them are super safe, but you still follow these precautions. All we ask is to be as careful on the internet.

    • @TranquilTurbulence@lemmy.zip
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      06 hours ago

      Those things are really intuitive, and anyone should be able to understand them. The digital world is completely different and alien, which makes it difficult to think about. People don’t understand it, so they can’t be expected to have a rational opinion about it.

  • Salamander
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    013 hours ago

    I am privacy conscious and care about privacy even though I don’t care too much about my own personal privacy just for privacy’s sake.

    Privacy advocacy runs deeper than just protecting your own data. Convincing someone to care about “their privacy” is more straightforward when they face a real threat. For example, a journalist in Mexico writing about a politician linked to organized crime has every reason to avoid being easily tracked. That person is not going to post their location on Facebook.

    But most people aren’t under direct threat. If you read my texts, you’ll find casual conversations with family and dinner plans. I’m not afraid of someone showing up at my door, so I’m fine sharing my address to get a package delivered. Getting ads is a minor annoyance.

    Still, I care about privacy. Not necessarily mine, but privacy as a principle. I care about what surveillance capitalism does to society. Even if my personal threat model is easy, I want tools and systems to exist for people with harder ones. Privacy is part of the kind of world I think we should live in, and its erosion usually points to larger structural problems.

    So back to the question. It’s easier to convince someone to care about privacy if they feel directly threatened. But if they don’t, you need something else to make them give up convenience in the name of privacy. That something is ideology. You’re asking how to shift someone’s ideological framework. That’s hard, and not something you can do for them. You can recommend good material, share your reasoning, explain what led you to care. But they have to engage with the ideas themselves. Like with exercise, you can’t build someone’s muscles for them. You can’t implant the ideology, but you can create the conditions for it to take root.

  • @1rre@discuss.tchncs.de
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    013 hours ago

    Do people need to care?

    Do what you need to to secure your privacy, and let people know how much of a travesty it is that their privacy and rights are being stripped away, but at the end of the day they’re their own people and so if they choose not to care that’s their decision, and it’s not up to you to choose how they’re allowed to think or live their lives, even if it appears obviously wrong and short-sighted to you or I

    • @pandorabox@lemmy.worldOP
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      013 hours ago

      Thats truu. Yeah if people dont want to do it, they wont🤣 unforrunately.

      Yeah im gonna work on myself. I really want a fairphone, but thats gonna take time😭😭 but meanwhile i try to use only foss and privacy respecting apps🙌 i gotta try my best

  • InfiniteGlitch
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    013 hours ago

    I gave up on convincing people about privacy and all that. They don’t care and say the old crap “I have nothing to hide” but seem utterly perplexed when you tell them Facebook scandals (and then still keep using it).

    People have chosen easy of use and laziness over privacy.

    • @pandorabox@lemmy.worldOP
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      013 hours ago

      Thats truu esp with them using data from facebook to kidnapp people. That alone was like a hold up.

      But i feel like using provacy respecting options is easy nowadays. But people get stuck in their ways.