• steve228uk
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    64811 months ago

    Nobody, absolutely nobody should trust that idiot with your ID.

    • pizza-bagel
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      27811 months ago

      If you always wanted to leak your ID to a bunch of hackers thanks to poor security practices, this is a great opportunity for you to do so

        • @TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world
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          9111 months ago

          then is trying to lose as little money as possible from this ordeal

          Bro he could have just bought it and done nothing and he would have been better off. I don’t have the same read that you do. My read is that he had specific strategic political interests in buying it and the money/ value/ revenue shit is secondary.

        • @fubo@lemmy.world
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          2011 months ago

          Nah, his entire goal was to take something away from the woke liberals and journalists and make it a Safe Space for fascist snowflakes.

      • netburnr
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        1511 months ago

        Nothing the credit agencies don’t already leak every year or two…

      • theodewere
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        11 months ago

        or everyone could recognize that he is far more malevolent toward you than any hacker could possibly be, but yeah, they definitely have no security that worries about YOUR data

    • @mister_monster@monero.town
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      6611 months ago

      It’s not about trusting some idiot. It’s about attaching your identity to your activities online. I remember when these websites used to advise against doxing yourself.

      • @HughJanus@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        I mean this whole process is explicitly for the purpose of attaching your identity to your online activities. If you don’t want to do it, just don’t.

        I shudder to think of what will happen when hackers inevitably get into Twitter servers and steal all those IDs though…

    • Magnor
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      5011 months ago

      Yeah. I’d rather hand it over to the weird guy at the bus stop. At least he’s not a billionaire douche bag.

      • @ShakeThatYam@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Ironically, it’s going to be a bunch of “libertarian” tech bros who use crypto for “privacy” who will be the first to give Musk (and by proxy every world government) their ID.

        • @xmr_unlimited@monero.town
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          211 months ago

          Probably most monero users dont use kyc exchanges so i dont think they will use kyc twitter let alone the first ones. This may kill twitter, but there is lots of stupid out there like those crypto and bitcoin users lol so you never know.

    • @Strangle@lemmy.world
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      2011 months ago

      Shouldn’t trust Twitter users either, they’ll take an out of context joke you made back in 2011 and ruin your life over it.

      Honestly, just fuck talking to people online. Literal no good will ever come of it. I’m just gonna stop communicating with people.

      This shit is so dumb, no upside, only downsides

    • @GreenMario@lemm.ee
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      1811 months ago

      He’s gonna dox all the liberals/lefties. Wouldn’t be surprised if this wasn’t the original plan.

      • ChaoticNeutralCzech
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        811 months ago

        And journalists if they report on him negatively, or oppose his Russian “peace” talk suggestions, even if it puts their career in danger where they live. Peak freedom of speech absolutism!

    • HiramFromTheChi
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      1111 months ago

      Instructions unclear. Uploaded my social security card and DNA samples.

  • Dr. Wesker
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    33611 months ago

    Twitter aside, if any website or app ever asks this of you, please nope the fuck out.

    • sab
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      11511 months ago

      I guess it only occasionally makes sense for government web sites and banks. X might have ambitions to become a bank, so in that sense it might make sense.

      So another piece of advice: if twitter ever asks you if you want to start using it for banking, nope the fuck out.

      • @Hotzilla@sopuli.xyz
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        11 months ago

        You Americans should get to this century and start performing digital strong authentications like the rest of us. Sending picture of your ID to anyone is insane :)

        How we do it here in Finland is that there are digital identity providers which use bank/mobile carrier to identify you. They then use MFA when identifying you. Any service can use these services to do strong authentication for you. And they don’t cost anything for the customer, and is really cheap for the company who wants to identify you. It is also build into the law that you must identify people using these, to avoid identity theft.

      • Dr. Wesker
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        11 months ago

        Idk, I’ve got my hands in a lot of financial cookie jars, and I don’t recall ever being asked for something like this. At the very least, not in this manner.

        • 520
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          2211 months ago

          It’s pretty standard for European banks thanks to Know Your Customer laws.

          • exen904
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            511 months ago

            If you keep in mind that it’s only done with special certified subcontractors, then yes. I would never give that information directly to a company like X. And yes, also those special companies are more times shady than they should be, but still.

            • 520
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              311 months ago

              If you keep in mind that it’s only done with special certified subcontractors, then yes.

              Dunno what you’re talking about here but I’ve had to go through something similar every time I’ve opened a new account with a financial service.

              But yeah, I would not trust Twitter/X either. Musk is too much of an emotional child following whatever whim takes his fancy that day.

        • sab
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          811 months ago

          I know there’s a similar-ish process for accessing Spanish social security services online at least, and I believe it’s the same for some other services as well.

          Then again, Spanish public services are not exactly the gold standard for digitalization.

          • diprount_tomato
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            711 months ago

            Wait are you Spanish too? Those websites look like they’ve been made by a secretary’s cousin that only knew how to copy and paste in the 90s

            • sab
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              611 months ago

              I just have a few Spanish friends! And from what they’re telling me that’s probably exactly how these websites were made.

              • diprount_tomato
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                311 months ago

                I mean, most public computers are very old too. Like 20 years old at leat

        • qaz
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          311 months ago

          I have the opposite experience but maybe it’s just different in the EU

      • Yoryo
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        1211 months ago

        He’s definitely pushing for Twitter to be the next WeChat.

      • 👍Maximum Derek👍
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        711 months ago

        To follow his dystopian vision of Twitter as the Everything app, in the US it will have to be a bank at some point. The same way that Apple is now a bank in order to power parts of their wallet and payment platforms.

            • Flying Squid
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              211 months ago

              Or maybe because it has an APY of over 4%, which is pretty damn good for a savings account. If Google came up with a +4% APY savings account, I’m sure people would sign up for that in droves too.

              Also, there are Apple, Google/Android, Microsoft and Linux cults. Apple is not unique in that arena.

      • Neato
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        311 months ago

        The only government function that has ever wanted a “selfie” was for my drivers license and passport. Both of which feature that picture. But I’ve never done either through a site.

    • @BorgDrone@lemmy.one
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      1911 months ago

      It’s stupid as well, because it’s impossible to authenticate an id or passport from a photo. You can just photoshop something and send that in.

    • Trebach
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      411 months ago

      Then nope the fuck out of Hetzner then. They asked that of me.

    • Otter
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      311 months ago

      Outside of services where you need to access it (ex. school / exams / government services), one beneficial one might be dating apps. There’s an advantage to being verified.

      Although none of them ask for ID from what I understand, just “hold up 3 fingers and take a touch your nose” or something…

  • TimeSquirrel
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    11 months ago

    90s: stay anonymous, be careful with strangers, don’t give up any more info than you have to. The internet can be a dangerous place. Also, supervise your kids and have them ask permission to go online.

    2010s-2020s: livestream your life 24/7, use real names and emails everywhere when signing up for bullshit, hand your kid a phone and let them go buck wild as well.

    How did we stray like this?

  • @gndagreborn@lemmy.world
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    14311 months ago

    I, for one, want to thank Elon Musk for graciously backing up my highly sensitive government ID (that has my birthdate, eye color, height, weight), my biometric data, and likeness! It is such a nice thing to centralize all my most sensitive data into one giant honeypot waiting to meltdown. It is made even more appealing after he fired the entire staff responsible for maintaining this honeypot!

      • @krayj@sh.itjust.works
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        1911 months ago

        Considering all the past, current, and future disgruntled employees - I wouldn’t be shocked at all by an insider leaking stuff like this. The company is unstable like its leadership - which isn’t very trust-inspiring.

        • @whofearsthenight@lemm.ee
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          1111 months ago

          Well, that’s a possibility too, but I was expecting that they just lose the data through over-work or negligence. Remember, this is the company that DDOS’d itself a month or two ago and had to be told about it on twitter…

        • @voluble@lemmy.world
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          611 months ago

          Following the theory that the leadership at twitter actually hate the users and are decimating the platform on purpose for the lols, maybe the outcome you suggest is the plan.

          Part of me believes this theory, because it’s hard to imagine how someone even with the explicit stated purpose of destroying twitter could have topped the recent developments. It’s almost as if what they’re trying to do is embarrass and degrade the users.

    • @realharo@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      It does say “for up to 30 days”. Would’ve been better if it was 24 hours, but after the initial wave of verifications, there probably won’t be much there.

      That is assuming you can trust the company that does the verification for them.

  • dinckel
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    9811 months ago

    There is absolutely 0 chance I’m sending any documents to the clown in chief

  • @chaorace@lemmy.sdf.org
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    9511 months ago

    Man, Elon’s got one hell of a boner for WeChat, huh? I honestly feel embarassed for him. WeChat is WeChat because it’s Chinese – there is no secret formula for Elon to steal. The circumstances which created WeChat simply do not exist in the west and IMO it should stay that way.

    • I Cast Fist
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      3311 months ago

      Sure it can. Just wait 'til it also becomes your banking app, keeping your money totally safe, then you’ll be able to double trust it. Would space karen x ever lie to anyone? /s

      • @DangerMouse@lemm.ee
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        1311 months ago

        Of course she wouldn’t lie to anyone. Just wait 'til your totally safely kept money becomes programmable by central banks, regulating where you can spend it, when you can spend it, what you can spend it on, and builds a neat profile of yourself linking every single activity you do, online and offline. We wouldn’t want any terrorists or bad citizens to be out there now, would we? /s

    • @Anonymousllama@lemmy.world
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      1111 months ago

      If they ever have a data breach I’m sure they’ll totally do right by the consumer also 🙄

      Wouldn’t trust this clown with my digital words, let alone a copy of my actual ID

      • @RagingRobot@lemmy.world
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        311 months ago

        I’m sure they would offer 6 months of free credit screening as a consolation like all the other companies do. Just enter your social security number so they know what to look out for.

  • @Merulox@lemmy.world
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    8011 months ago

    it won’t be mandatory, unfortunately. Would’ve loved to see another fediverse mass migration

    • gabe [he/him]
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      3511 months ago

      The eternal september moment for the fediverse is very much coming

    • meseek #2982
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      2611 months ago

      Fuck. I was hoping Elon had a meltdown and made it mandatory.

      Not that Elon having some of your more pedigree info could possibly ever go wrong!

    • @Thorny_Thicket@sopuli.xyz
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      311 months ago

      Yeah I don’t know who they ask to do this but I’ve been on Twitter since 2014 and they’ve never shown me this and if they mandated it I’d leave even though they already have my phone number and know who I’m.

  • Einar
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    7511 months ago

    Online banks use this method. I am not happy with this either. It’s government-regulated, so OK (sort of).

    A social media site? No, thank you.

    • @dejf@lemmy.world
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      3411 months ago

      Banks are usually bound by KYC (know your customer) laws and are required to verify your identity. Imagine trusting some random third-party company with your photo ID though… Insane.

      • voxel
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        911 months ago

        actually, two companies.
        you give up your id forever to an id verification company + twitter stores it for 30 days

    • @SCB@lemmy.world
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      2611 months ago

      Banks have significantly stronger security and PII measures than X ever will, as well.

    • voxel
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      311 months ago

      yeah, that’s obvious. you need a photo of your id in order to open a bank account…
      they usually process the data on their own though without using third parties

    • @Scrappy@feddit.nl
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      811 months ago

      Not only would you lose your SSN as an american citizen, you would also lose your credit score due to automated identity theft and possibly your mortgage (and more!)

  • Extras
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    I mean if you want your identity to be stolen, theres other equally fast ways

  • Obinice
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    6111 months ago

    Hahahahaha no.

    Besides, what makes them think I even have a government ID? I don’t drive and I’d only need a passport if I had to leave the country.

    Looooooooots of people don’t have ID.

      • @DJVIIIMan@lemmy.world
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        2711 months ago

        In the US, you need an ID if you want an actual job or bank account. Apart from living on the streets or living in the woods, I’m not sure how you could function without one.

        • @FringeTheory999@lemmy.world
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          111 months ago

          you only need it if you’re buying alcohol or driving a car. your work gets your social but isnt entitled to your ID, which you don’t have to have or carry if you do have it. You can’t even get a bank account without a contract cellphone, so people without ID use prepaid credit cards you buy at the store and load with cash.

          • @BroccoliFarts@lemmy.world
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            311 months ago

            Walmart used to have a ton of options for working class people that didn’t have banking options. Not sure if it’s still the case. Many US workers were full-time employed and housed and did not have a bank account. Check cashing was through Walmart.

            • @FringeTheory999@lemmy.world
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              211 months ago

              Wallmart won’t cash my checks, they also won’t tell me why they won’t cash my checks. I’ve never had any issues with them, so it’s a mystery. Not that I need that anymore but it’s not a system anyone should have to rely on.

    • @boonhet@lemm.ee
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      3111 months ago

      Looooooooots of people don’t have ID.

      In the civilized world, this is pretty endemic to your country and is actually a problem there as I understand.

      Personally, where I live, I couldn’t even vote or reliably buy alcohol if I didn’t have some form of ID to prove my identity or age (okay, I haven’t been carded in years, but it COULD happen). This is OK because everyone is mandated to have ID anyway (and it’s not in any way difficult to get one), so requiring ID for voting, for an example, doesn’t discriminate against poor people like in the US.

      That said, X still wouldn’t get my ID. I haven’t even given it to Google, despite them asking me for it so I could watch music videos with a lil bit of swearing or something (Funny thing being, my YouTube account is about old enough that in a year or 2 it can go buy beer here in the EU)

      • @FringeTheory999@lemmy.world
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        311 months ago

        ID is expensive and many poor folk don’t have them, so the “problem” is politically powerful groups implementing ID laws to prevent poor folk from voting. If I didn’t have to have a license, I’d never carry an ID.

        • @Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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          811 months ago

          Why would an ID be expensive?

          In Belgium it costs about 20€ to get one when you first turn 12. And 20€ if you ever lose it.

          • @BroccoliFarts@lemmy.world
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            When people in the US talk about a classist system, it’s more of the structure than the cost. There are state IDs that are inexpensive in most states, but the Motor Vehicles branch (or whatever the state calls their department) that issues the ID are frequently difficult to travel to in lower income areas. Occasionally, the branches are understaffed and information about what can be used as proof of ID isn’t communicated clearly. Combine this with the US’s poor labor laws, and it means that it’s risky for someone to take off work, spend significant time getting to a DMV branch, waiting in line a long time because of understaffing, then be told they need more proof of ID and to do it all over again.

            It’s frustrating for me and I have a driver’s license and a white-collar job so I can drive myself to the DMV easily and not worry about losing my job or losing a half-day’s pay.

            It’s still kind of messy also because proof of birth by birth certificate wasn’t required until relatively recently. My grandad was never issued a birth certificate. As far as the government is concerned, he didn’t exist until he joined the army. We all have to take his word on when he was born and his name. He told it to the army and had no legal proof before then. So my state establishes identification without using birth certificates, which takes more paperwork and complications.

            • @Saneless@sh.itjust.works
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              411 months ago

              Additionally, they’re pretty much only open during working hours, and they’re set up to often be an hour+ wait because why staff more than 2 people? It’s a monopoly on a service.

              So the ID may only cost $20 but the travel + missed work adds up fast

            • @FringeTheory999@lemmy.world
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              211 months ago

              sometimes I suspect that the DMVs job is to tell people to fuck off until they give up and stop trying. It’s a pretty effective form of voter suppression. You hit the nail on the head, I dont think I could have explained it better. Everything you said is particularly true in southern states where it disproportionately affects black people, they have the poorest infrastructure, no viable public transport, laws forbidding mail in voting and very limited polling places with that are open for very truncated operating hours.

          • @boonhet@lemm.ee
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            311 months ago

            They want two things to happen: ID to be expensive and Voter ID to be mandatory. Nobody wants the poors to vote, especially because statistically people of colour are more likely to be poor.

    • @M4775@lemmy.world
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      -511 months ago

      If all the ignorant masses don’t wake up to this WEF fuckery and it becomes “normalized” to need this for everything, then you’ll need it to receive your basic universal payment in centralized digital currency. You’ll also need it to incorporate your global “green score” which is like a type of social credit. Once cash is gone and decentralized crypto is illegal to own, most people will comply so they don’t starve. A 100% identifiable human 100% tracked and controlled. Fail to comply to something and your identity gets switched off. Nothing works for you now. This is not fiction. Just pay attention to the agenda of WEF. And if you think this can’t or won’t happen then please explain how the fuck Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn still exist? Every person who is faced with this request for government issued ID for anything that isn’t government should refuse and leave. Trusting these incompetent and abusive corporations with even more private information is illogical. They can’t keep anything safe now. Giving them more won’t “save you from the hackers”. That is a disingenuous deception to double down on control. They care nothing for your privacy, safety or well being. “We had a data breach and your personal information has been compromised. It includes your name, email, phone number, address and government issued ID with face scan. Oops, sorry”.
      Everyone needs to say “NO” to this now!

        • @M4775@lemmy.world
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          011 months ago

          Unlike the writing of Asimov, this is not a work of fiction. Do some digging for yourself and you’ll see that World Economic Forum has plans for you and I. Many have indeed been introduced. Many governments are following the agenda and have been for decades. Your answer is why I’m pessimistic and know we’re fucked. Klaus Schwab wants to be your feudal overlord. He knows what’s best for you. It sounds like you’re ready to trust him.

          • @S_204@lemmy.world
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            111 months ago

            I’ve dug deep, and what I’ve found just reinforces that positions like the one you’ve put forward are completely fabricated and only really accepted by uneducated, ignorant, socially displaced losers who want to feel like they know something everyone else doesn’t.

            Tldr; you gotta be a special sort of retarded to believe any of the bullshit you’re claiming to be true.