• @ExtremeDullard
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    818 months ago

    I never really understood the “I have nothing to hide” mindset.

    This subject is best summed up by the Girl in Andrew Niccol’s vastly underrated movie Anon:

    “It’s not that I have something to hide, I have nothing I want you to see”

    This is the most intelligent, best articulated commentary on privacy I’ve ever seen and it fits in 17 words.

    • @TimewornTraveler@lemm.ee
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      38 months ago

      “It’s not that I have something to hide, I have nothing I want you to see”

      This didn’t really resonate with me at all. Can you explain more?

      • @ExtremeDullard
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        18 months ago

        When you says “resonate”, do you mean you don’t understand the sentence? Or do you mean you don’t see why you should care?

        Re meaning, the sentence seems blindingly obvious to me. But maybe it isn’t… It means you don’t want privacy because you have something illegal to hide in your house, but because you don’t want to invite anybody in. I really don’t know how to explain it anymore clearly without repeating it verbatim.

        If you don’t see why this is important or you think it doesn’t concern you, send me your address and I’ll come around tonite to take pictures of your furniture without your permission.

        • @TimewornTraveler@lemm.ee
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          48 months ago

          I’m a bit off-put by your tone, but no, I was being genuine. Saying it doesn’t resonate means whatever was said doesn’t seem as profound or meaningful as it does to the person who said it. So the phrase really means that you want to shut everyone out? I guess that makes sense, given the hostility in your response.

          • @ExtremeDullard
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            28 months ago

            You read me wrong my friend. It was nothing more than an honest-to-goodness reply to you. No hostility. Be careful with written discussions, because you don’t see the face of whoever is writing and you tend to slap the state of mind you yourself are in when you read it. Imagine I’m writing this with a smile and that’s pretty much how I wrote it.

            You don’t find the quote profound and that’s fair enough. To each his own opinion. Me, I think it’s a perfect description of the core issue of privacy: having the choice not to expose what I don’t want to expose for no other reason that I don’t want to. I don’t want to shut everybody out, I want to freedom to do it if I so choose and not have to justify myself or suffer consequences.

            Maybe I’m easily impressed :)