• AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      People are fucking weird, dude. I used to be a professional blogger. I never put any pop-ups or subscription bullshit on my website because I am really opposed to that shit, even though “the money is in the list”. As an experiment one time I put a sign up on the homepage temporarily. I didn’t offer anything. I didn’t have any snazzy sales lingo. It just said “Sign up to be notified when new posts are published”. I got hundreds of sign-ups per day from real people. I guess in this case it made a little sense, since they were quality articles written by a human who was passionate about the subject, but still! Stop giving your email address to everyone, ya flipping weirdos!

    • BruceTwarzen@lemm.ee
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      20 days ago

      I grew up with computers and the internet, i learned from a young age to never click on pop ups, never use your real name or adress, have a burner e-mail, spot a scam and things like that. My friends were pretty much the same, because we all shared knowledge. When i was 20 or so i went to a friends house whom i only knew for a year. We used his family computer to book a flight or something. I never witnessed such horror. The computer was sloooooow as fuck, and riddled with every virus on the planet. Watching him use that computer was painful. It took like 5 minutes to load a website, in the meantime he was playing pop up pool, played a pop up roulette wheel and looked at pop up ads. It was something i never even imagined, because i assumed everyone would avoid these like the pest.

      • ThunderWhiskers@lemmy.world
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        19 days ago

        Same. I was taught that the Internet was for anonymity. You never supplied details from your real life to the internet and largely treated it as a hostile environment. The Internet was cool and full of information but also dangerous. Today I am still a little weirded out by how open people are with their personal information online.

        • skulblaka@sh.itjust.works
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          19 days ago

          What really gets me about it is that these very same parents that taught us how to safely navigate the internet are now the MAGAts on Facebook posting openly terroristic threats under their legal name and donating to Trump’s scam central.

          Like, I could understand if it was the kids who never got taught better. But these people know. I know for a fact they know because they taught ME half my web safety knowledge.

          Something in modern society - I choose to blame the news cycle, but it’s almost certainly more - has done something extremely scary to all our parents.

          • ThunderWhiskers@lemmy.world
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            19 days ago

            I’m gonna take a shot in the dark and say the impact of lead poisoning and micro plastics is way worse than anyone realizes yet. It feels like I am actively watching my parents mental decline and they are only about 60.

      • HubertManne@moist.catsweat.com
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        19 days ago

        I could see a weather one if it just notified about weather. that being said I have other ways to get notifications than in my browser.

    • thehatfox@lemmy.world
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      19 days ago

      Same, if I was to draw a Venn diagram of “websites I visit” and “notifications I need”, the circles would be so far apart they’d be at opposite ends of the universe.

      Browsers should make that feature much easier to fully disable. Same goes for location data, which an alarming amount of websites now seem to request despite having no need for it.