• Probably the same. This bears repeating: All your information online is and always has been available for others to collect and see, from FBI to advertisers. If you want any amount of protection, it must be with E2E encryption for which you own the keys.

      We taught online safety in the 90s. Did we all just collectively forget this in the last two decades?

      • They stopped teaching about computers. I tutored high schoolers about 10 years ago and they didn’t know how to use computers fluently. It moved to the realm of expecting parents to teach to their kids along with taxes and career planning.

        Speaking of which, I grew up in the 90s pre Internet, and started using the Internet in middle school. Definitely never got any official Internet safety lessons. Maybe I was a little too early? Idk. But by the time I was 30 schools were not teaching this at least from what I saw

      • Yeah pretty much. As soon as facebook broke the ice on “never use your real name on the internet” it was over. Now we have entire generations that were introduced to the internet as one that was ruled by social media sites. They were never even taught the same online safety stuff that we grew up with.

        • I met some speedrunners during the Before Times. Definitely younger than me, probably about half my age. They had a hell of a time wrapping their brains around the fact that folks a) use handles, and b) answer to them. FirstnameLastnameAFewDigits was just on the edge of what they thought was normal.

          This isn’t a slam on them by any means. For a lot of folks, usernames don’t actually mean anything, they’re just a barrier to entry to log into something. They still go by and use their walletnyms, and don’t connect the ideas of “usernames,” “online handles,” and “something somebody answers to.” Which, yes, we can blame Facebook for.

      • We taught online safety in the 90s. Did we all just collectively forget this in the last two decades?

        All of those people signed up for Facebook and thought their data was private because they marked their page private. While they post with their real name. With a company that will collect your data and do whatever the fuck they want with it.

      • I think a lot of people have forgotten this. Very few folks these days remember bloggers getting shut down for stuff they posted. Or stuff posted on mailing lists (like dc-stuff). Or for stuff they posted on Usenet (the Co$ was behind that one, most notably).

        Seriously, folks. If you post it online, someone can get to it. It’s public in deed if not in intent.