Add "Information Scarcity" post
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content/posts/information-scarcity.md
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title: "Information Scarcity"
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date: 2024-03-01T21:55:39+01:00
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tags: ["internet", "internet_security"]
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---
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I will not be picking battles between the extreme right or left side of the political spectrum.
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In fact, I will merely try to report on the negative impacts that capitalism has had on this astounding
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technology, referred to as "the internet". I will also try to stay away from emotional writing, even
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if such a technology lies very close to my heart. This does not mean I side with left nor right.
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This means the common individual should focus more on the problem at hand and come up with the best possible
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solution for that specific scenario rather than just falling onto the extreme left or right wing.
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This is especially true for developers..
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We live in a world where money is power. That fact should not be ignored. The creation of internet was
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an unexpected turn for the market. Companies realized that it was a powerful tool to gain new customers with. And
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of course, how could it not be? You are more exposed to the new customers' eyes and are therefore, more likely
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to make more sales and profit, right? How could have that possibly turned for the worse?
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## Data Protection
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The internet that we live in today is a mess. Service creation -> data collection -> data breach. In that order.
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Service creation refers to any act of writing or shipping software for the end-user (or the end-developer depending on what you are creating).
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Data collection refers to the collection of personally identifiable information without explicit or full consent from the user
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(which, let's be real, is the case in 2024. Well, unless you are keen on reading the 2000 word long privacy policy for every product that you use, which
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can be changed by the company at any time of the day. Without your consent. Have fun reading these vague essays).
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Data breach refers to the unescapable information compromise that will happen sooner or later in the process of shipping software to a wider audience.
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Production code is never 100% safe and free from security vulnerabilities. Therefore, every time a maliscious user discovers an unknown vulnerability,
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a potential data breach is about to take place. The possible outcomes range from absolutely nothing to the total data compromise for the users.
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Sometimes I find myself questioning the intelect of the people who create solutions to simple problems, yet feel this internal need to surround
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the solution with software rubbish. Perhaps you have noticed that many websites nowadays require account creation with a personally identifiable
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email address, phone number, gender, address, and much more. Most of such websites deal with problems whose core solution is SIMPLIFICATION, yet they go the other
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way around, endlessly complicating their systems over and over again until they break. And as you might imagine, the more code a product has, the more
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vulnerable it is to security vulnerabilities. That is the number one lesson every developer should be aware of before starting out on their
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problem solving journey.
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Not to mention the pace at which the developers are forced to work. Data protection is most definitely not the top priority for a company as much as
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the process for profiting is. Developers are constantly pounded and pounded to create software as quickly as possible. Limiting them with impossibly
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short deadlines and stressing them out. This most definitely leads to security bugs.
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## Rise for the Money
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Do we really wish for such use of such a powerful technology? A technology that has the potential to transmit GIGABYTES of information every second,
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yet is limited by the SOS (shiny object syndrome) of humans and their will to make money by wasting processing power on
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advertisements, distract the end-users with useless popups, make them fill forms, and create accounts to spam them with
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new deals and make even more money? All of that while also collecting in bulk all sorts of personally identifiable information?
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Just to give them the content that they needed to inform themselves? Just to accomplish the one basic idea that internet,
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this stunning technology, promised to bring to the table since it ever came to existence? How did that happen? How did usage of
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such a technology further push drawbacks against it?
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The approach that the first internet took, was by far the best at fulfilling what we define as "internet" - a place for
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people to find and share information, not necessarily limited by race, background, actions, political standpoint, or any other form of bias.
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Before the companies realized the potential of this technology and invaded it with bloat, internet was a place for individuals to share information,
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get to know other people, and create something personal. Something private. Something that was a digital footprint of the community.
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That footprint represented people and their will to collaborate and share information.
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However, as companies and governments got more involved, they started throwing more and more
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capitalistic structures into it, which resulted in a slow death of the initial goal and reason behind this technology.
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This can be widely shown from the fact, that blogs, BLOGS, a once subjective and private online expression of somebody's persona
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or presence, are now spitting blood to be the top tier result on Google's search page. That evidently puts money and power before
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community, collaboration, and especially, *content quality*. Which is quite self-evident after you notice the vagueness that most
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articles have online. The page fills you with popups, advertisements, forms to fill, and required login pages, just to access content
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that is precooked by artificial intelligence, is extremely vague, and potentially misleading. Yes, it is indeed, a triumph for information
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scarcity that is taking place on one of the biggest highways of information we currently possess. And it does indeed, show one of many
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negative traits of capitalism after you throw it into a free cyber space.
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## Clapback
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Formerly, to escape this hellish use of the internet, you had to stop using the internet. Now, there is a
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new world that digital rights activists and freedom seekers are creating. It is a strong and willingful movement
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that has been standing its ground for many decades. It was in September 1983 that Richard Stallman launched
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the GNU project, whose goal was to create a fully functioning operating system and a toolset to work with data on
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that system. Today, a combination of the GNU project and Linux kernel (the core of an operating system) is known as GNU/Linux
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and it is a perfect alternative to the proprietary systems like OS X or MS Windows that we do not deserve nor need.
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