So, just got a notification about google’s new enhanced safe browsing. It says: To help protect your account and data, Enhanced Safe Browsing for your account checks for risky: - URLs - Downloads - Browser extensions - System information - Small sample of pages

How it uses it:

  • Uses information from Enhanced Safe Browsing to improve your security in Google Chrome and Gmail when you’re signed in.
  • Temporarily associates information from Enhanced Safe Browsing with your Google Account when you’re signed in to help protect you across Google apps.

It seems to me as if, whenever they come up with new changes, it’s a double edged sword where they claim everything gets better and safer, while my paranoid mind just sees it as new tricks to get even more data…

19 points

I’m surprised anyone on privacy guides would still be using Google. That notification alone would make me want to switch

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7 points

Well, i try to use their services as little as possible, but i still have a play store account. And an old gmail address. Degoogling, for me at least, is more of a process, rather than a one time act of abandoning it.

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4 points

That’s fair, it took me a while to get away from Google as well. Everyone’s journey is different and can take a while to completely move away from them. The only difficulty I had was replacing YouTube.

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2 points

I replaced youtube with newpipe and freetube or invidious. Though i think freetube still gives data to google, or so i read somewhere. So, i wonder how people replace the play store. Only use apps through f-droid?

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1 point

The only difficulty I had was replacing YouTube

How did you go with that? YouTube Premium is the only remaining google service I use, but p2p replacements etc just do not fill the void.

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9 points
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6 points

I turned it off, it got in the way.

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4 points

I didn’t switch it on, i hope i’m alert enough to spot all phishing attempts. However, i have to admit that reading about AI getting used more and more for malicious scams, makes me pretty nervous. I can easily recognize scams and also read about them to stay up to date, but i don’t know if i will be able to spot them in the future.

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2 points

I think the actual problem is the quantity and not the quality. AI generated phishing attemps won’t be higher quality in my opinion, at least for quite some time. I give you an example what I mean: I ordered products from three different websites and booked two buses. Just for those I got exactly 27! emails from the vendors, the shipping companies and the bus company (one of my bus reservation got changed 4 times). Without paypal! That’s overwhelming! And I think when you just get the “right” malicious mail, in terms of the right faked company, I’m not able to say I’m save, despite I would say I’m totally aware of phishing mails and kinda good in tracking them down.

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2 points

Yes, the quantity can be absurd, though i usually use things like anonaddy. As for being save, i’m just not sure about this. The other day i read about wormgpt - like chatbot, but for malicious hackers - and i think that is pretty worrying. So far, you can check quite some signs that things are phishing attempts, because they are usually quite clunky, but things evolve. I used to read on r/scams to keep up with common scam tactics (also to warn my dad who hasn’t a clue about these things), but i haven’t found an alternative community on the fediverse so far.

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1 point

Just use startpage it scrapes the results from google

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2 points

Weren’t they brought by an ad company?

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2 points

yea but their privacy policy is acceptable

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1 point

I have been using startpage for years :-)

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