Hi all. I’m Dan. You can message me on Matrix @danhakimi:matrix.org, or follow me on Mastodon at @danhakimi.

You might want to check out my men’s style blog, The Second Button, and the associated instagram account

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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 30th, 2023

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  • So I did read the article. But telegram as a service allows users (some of whom are just civilians with no ties to Hamas) to warn people of imminent attack. That’s in the article. They (that channel admins) still have to add subscribers.

    It’s a Hamas channel! They’re not warnings, they’re threats! And they’re recruiting! And they know those users are sharing video of their attrocities in other Hamas groups! And the al-Qassam Brigades have a public channel too!

    The thing is though, for telegram and messaging apps like it this is basically playing whack a mole. I know I said that before, but what I meant by it is that it’s better for the purposes of building intelligence and or sending their geolocation data to relevant authorities. If they close one channel more will pop up. IP bans and even device bans will not stop this from happening. You can create a telegram bot in like 10 minutes.

    The mole is out in the open, sticking its fingers in its ears, and laughing at us, and Durov is saying “yeah, that’s a fine mole, no idea why I’d whack it.” It’s gaining steam! They’re openly using the names of terrorist organizations and recruiting new members constantly and telegram isn’t even considering a response.

    But deleting certain channels will detrimentally affect the civilians caught in the cross fire.

    No, it absolutely will not.

    "Telegram CEO Pavel Durov wrote that he was hesitant to shut down Hamas-used channels in a post on October 13th, saying that “tackling war-related coverage is seldom obvious” and writing that Hamas had used Telegram a few days prior to warn civilians to evacuate an area before the attacked it " < from your article.

    He referenced Ashkelon. There are zero Israelis in Ashkelon following Hamas on Telegram. Israel knows when to evacuate its citizens, and unlike Hamas, actually does so when necessary. Hamas is a terrorist organization. Hamas is threatening Israeli civilians before targeting those civilians. THE THREAT IS THE FIRST CAUSE OF THE TERROR. This is what terrorism is! They threaten violence on civilians, they do the violence they threatened, and then they celebrate it by sharing videos! They threaten, plan, and celebrate on telegram, out in the open!

    It’s the same thing with scammers. Most telegram scammers are using private messages that have encryption. So you absolutely are suggesting the telegram snoop through private messages.

    There’s a funnel. They start on twitter, just kind of innocently saying “follow me on Telegram.” Then they say “alright, this broadcast channel will tell you exactly what token to buy, and when! Do exactly that!” It’s a pump and dump scheme, some people fall for it. And then the real rubes get into those 1-on-1 secret chats with the scammers where they go ahead and give out their private info.

    A tech company like Telegram could, in theory follow this funnel through the unencrypted channels. It’s obvious enough from the information you and I have.

    These channels are all operating openly. You know they’re all pump and dump scams, right? They’re not in secret chats, they’re huge channels with hundreds of thousands of subscribers.

    So can we stop pretending that this is simply an easy fix?

    Can we stop pretending that ignoring the problem is a better solution?









  • You can make a private group on Facebook where you can exchange messages without anyone who lacks system access being able to view them. That’s how CP rings hide what they’re doing. And Facebook allows it until someone reports it or the cops subpoena that data.

    My point here was that people would be stupid to expect that their information is private from facebook.

    I also have to imagine that you’re wrong, I’m sure they have proactive means to scan for CP and ban it whenever they become aware of it, and just don’t have the means to always ban CP groups immediately. Like, knowing your company controls child porn and allowing it to remain in control is a great way to end up in prison, most corporate douchebags prefer to avoid prison if they can. Like, Zuckerberg does not want to go to jail just so he can get a few more ad bucks from pedos.

    I feel very weird defending Facebook, they’re quite evil, but your conspiracy theory is silly.

    So what was it you wanted them (Facebook, or WhatsApp, or signal or telegram) to do?

    You seem like you’re focused on private groups, which I think are still problematic on Telegram as they are on Facebook, but you’re really neglecting the issue of the fully public broadcast groups Hamas is known for, and known for engaging in terrorist activity on, including the al-Qassam Brigades! Why can’t Telegram ban the fucking public channel for the al-Qassam Brigades? Doesn’t that just make the issue so obvious?

    Delete the accounts or known terrorists whether they are or aren’t using the platform for terrorist activities?

    That would be good, but also, if you know somebody is a terrorist, isn’t that at least enough cause to look through their non-encrypted chats to see if they really are or are not using the platform for terrorist activities?

    You appear to very much be advocating for people’s private messages to be scanned and possibly read by a human being if they trip the algorithm. So yes. You are advocating for an invasion of privacy.

    Meh. If your public messages and stories and large group messages (which are really not private in any meaningful sense) trip an algorithm with high confidence, then scanning your unencrypted kinda-private-ish messages after that doesn’t seem like a big problem, and human review after a high-confidence trip there doesn’t seem too bad either.


  • First off, let me just say that I am not quite sure how telegram works. So far I know it’s just a far saver WhatsApp that guarantees that your info isn’t being sold.

    None of that is true. Telegram is Open Source, but is not safer than WhatsApp in any way. Telegram messages are not e2ee by default, and group chats can not be e2ee, unlike Whatsapp which encrypts all messages end-to-end, always.

    There’s no real safeguard in place to prevent telegram from selling your data. It probably isn’t doing it for now, it claims that it doesn’t sell your data, but so does facebook. Their privacy policies aren’t that different. Telegram does have your data, it could sell your data, it just doesn’t. Note that telegram is not a nonprofit.

    Second, most of my issues with your ideas of censoring content is meant in a more general sense.

    I’m not calling for “more general” censorship, I’ve been quite specific.

    You mean apart from the fact they can just hop over to some other platform?

    How is that not an inconvenience? Moving your entire. organization, finding a platform that won’t ban you, finding a platform that will host unlimited beheading videos at high resolution, finding a platform with the same broadcast feature so they can spread propaganda to hundreds of millions of people, finding that all for free… What part of that is just as convenient as continuing to do what they’re doing?

    Also I am not quite sure how you imagine telegram to actually do something against terrorists while also guaranteeing the privacy aspect of the service they are providing.

    Telegram is literally already aware of which accounts belong to Hamas, Pavel Durov has publicly commented on why he doesn’t feel like Hamas is a problem, this is not a question of discovering terrorism on the platform, this is a question of figuring out what to do about it.

    That’s literally their whole thing, privacy.

    Privacy is aggressively not a thing Telegram is about. You seem to have fallen for some of their weird marketing. The only things about Telegram that might preserve your privacy are the option to sign up anonymously (a lot of messaging apps have this, and it’s not necessarily a good thing), and the fact that it isn’t owned by facebook (most messaging apps aren’t).

    This is especially true of broadcast channels, which any schmuck can view without installing the app or having an account at all.

    I am not even going to bother with all these other straw man fallacies. If you can’t have a civil discussion without putting words in my mouth and twisting the meaning of them we are done here.

    But that’s what I’m talking about. I said Telegram shouldn’t provide terrorists with a means to share videos of beheadings, and you have a problem with the freedom-related implications of that, I’m really not sure what your point was.






  • To hear people on the privacy subreddits and even the privacy Lemmy communities tell it, it’s absolutely about the data these companies are collecting.

    Sure. But I can’t blame them for collecting data that I literally decide to send them for no reason but my own, I can only blame them for using that data in a shitty way.

    If I post something on Instagram, I know that they’re collecting the photo I post, that’s how posting works, that’s not the issue. The issue comes if they try scanning peoples’ faces to invade their privacy, or build an advertising profile about me. Sending unencrypted chat messages is not that different.

    If I download Whatsapp, and I enable the contacts permission, and it uploads all of the Contacts data on my phone, that’s super not okay, because I never wanted to give them that data in the first place, they just jacked it.(I disable contacts permission for whatsapp on my phone, but most users would never know that data gets uploaded to begin with.


  • but I’m only going to point out that the “De-Googling” trend doesn’t really have anything to do with the right to be forgotten. It has more to do with enshittification - Google shutting down services, making their current services harder to use, charging money for what used to be free services, charging more money for already paid services, adding ads, etc etc. Basically people finding alternative software to Google because Google’s practices have become increasingly volatile and their services less and less reliable.

    Ohhhhh that de-Googling. Yeah, I’ve done a bit of that, disabled the Google app on my phone entirely since Firefox does its job better, but I’m on Android and doing all that setup every time I get a new phone is just a headache.



  • Bad elements are not inconveniented at all by any of that,

    … how the fuck are they not inconvenienced by that? Can you not agree that telegram is convenient for them? The unlimited fucking video uploads and built-in audience?

    it’s normal people who suffer from getting censored.

    Eh. I’m not sure what the real risk is there, IDK how Telegram is going to hear “let’s censor terrorists” and end up censoring normal people. And I’m also not sure having a post or channel shut down on Telegram would really lead to suffering, I’ve never seen or heard of a decent telegram channel… The best ones mostly still seem to be charlatans, maybe a couple for, like, companies or reporters that are just present everywhere, but nothing that actually serves a valuable role in society… But yeah, I don’t think there’s any huge risk of those charlatans being banned, if they’re who you’re worried about.

    I personally am not willing to give up any online freedoms I have, just on the off chance that it might be inconvenient for criminals.

    Like, it is objectively convenient and useful and helpful to “criminals” who celebrate after burning children alive by calling their parents and asking them if they’re proud, like, kind of goes beyond “criminal,” but yeah, they’re going to send the videos they took to other terrorists and spread them to checks notes spread terror, which is the whole fucking thing they do.

    But also, you’re not willing to give up your “freedom” to share videos of people you beheaded on telegram? Is that an important freedom to you?


  • Scams will always be profitable. The difference between scamming someone in real life and scamming them via the internet isn’t all the much different.

    It is! People are wary of scams, it’s not worth wasting an hour trying to scam one random person anymore. Spending a few hours trying to spam millions of people is a worthwhile use of a scammer’s time, especially when there’s no risk of being banned or caught.

    Scammers use phone calls to scan people too. Are you suggesting we tap and monitor everyone’s phones for keywords?

    That’s not a solution I would pose for that problem, no, but there are laws in place intended to reduce spam calling, and many, many tech companies are proposing many, many solutions for that, and nobody is saying “oh no, what if you accidentally classify an innocent telemarketing-spammer as a scammer?” Good riddance.

    The thing about privacy is that you seem to be willing to let people or organisations (that we can’t prove have our best interest at heart) violate people’s privacy in order to get the result you want. And there’s no proof that you will get that result.

    I think people should use e2ee-enabled chat services if they expect privacy. Telegram users don’t bother turning on secret chats because they lack all of the features that make people want to use telegram. I think Whatsapp users have a much more reasonable expectation of privacy, and Whatsapp still goes through efforts to reduce spam and misinformation on its platform. I think Matrix users have a more reasonable expectation of privacy (since encryption is on by default, and can be used in group chats and spaces and on calls and with every other matrix feature), but Matrix servers still do not federate with Al Qaeda rocket.chat servers, because they know better.

    Meanwhile someone who’s human has to make the determination that something is criminal or something is CP and that means we have to pay people to comb through all that data.

    Telegram has to. It can afford to. I’ll remind you that I did not set criminality as the bar.

    That’s very taxing on the individuals involved. It does harm to them.

    Now think of what it does to the rest of the people who have to see it. If you can pay one person to willingly review content for child porn that couldn’t be identified in advance so a million others don’t have to see it, is that really the worst thing?

    Now I’m sure you’ll say something about expectation of privacy when submitting anything to the web. But people do have the expectation of privacy online. Take a look at people who are deliberately de-googling or up in arms about web sites collecting their data to target them with ads.

    Data collection feels very different to me, but you’re specifically sending your messages to Telegram. Like, Google scanning my emails is something I have trouble objecting to (although I object to the use of that information for ad-related purposes, of course).

    By “de-googling,” do you mean the whole “right to be forgotten” thing? I think that’s nonsense, clearly at odds with the right to remember, and largely used by wealthy assholes to deflect attention from shitty things they did.