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This is not what the vast majority of people want.

People want security issues patched, preferrably without them having to do any work or even know about it (because they won't do the work and get annoyed at popups they don't feel like they need). People want bugs fixed (and crash reports do actually help with that, despite what some say). People want companies to prioritize the features that they're using and fix places where users get "stuck", and that's much easier with telemetry. People will almost always choose free shit over products they have to pay for, and for many products, free only works if you know what ads the user should see.



there's thin line between 'autoupdates consisting of security patches and bugfixes' and 'we will extract every piece of data we can and possibly remove features with no way to rollback'.

most apps fall into the latter, into the network blackhole they go. You give them an inch, they take everything.

You cant even get away from this by paying (and i'm willing to to so!) because people who actually are willing to pay are the most valuable ones to advertisers - so the incentives are there to extract even more value in such case.

In case of products from outside of software domain there's this consumer assumption that product does the thing and just the thing - food doesn't try to poison you, toys are just toys and so on.

they are aware of tradeoffs - something's cheaper, it might be less safe, less featured or maybe made a bit worse.

99% of modern software is user hostile first - data extraction and maximizing value for adverts and then it might do a bad job of actually fulfilling its purpose, with updates usually making it worse over time, or jacking up prices in form of monthly subscription instead of license sale.


It's a printer.

The only way it could have security issues is if it's connected directly to the internet (not behind NAT) or a device on my LAN is actively attacking it. The former case is difficult to accomplish without enough expertise to know better; the latter is plausible, but mitigated by a printer too simple to easily harbor a persistent threat.


Theoretically there may be an exploit via data in the print jobs sent to the printer.


Sure, and that could break the printer, cause it to print things I don't want it to, or cause it to serve malware to other devices. I would like the printer to be too simple for the third case to be realistic, but that may be harder to build today than something with a more complex embedded OS.


I guess it may be possible that a printer exploit could be used to then exploit devices using it to print but yeah that's probably stretching it.


Of course security issues are usually highly mitigated already by not having internet access on the device.

And the vast majority of people hate ads like me.


> And the vast majority of people hate ads like me.

I don't mind respectful¹ ads, and refrain from using sponsorblock & similar. What I object to, and actively block, is the stalking that is endemic in the ad industry and is in no way respectful.

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[1] i.e. not the pop-ups/-unders of yore, not those that autoplay video or, worse, audio, not those that otherwise interfere with the normal use of the page I'm trying to look at, stalking etc.


That's up to you. I block everything and I'll never go back. I just want the whole advertising industry to go away. They've betrayed my trust so often that I'm never going to let them back in. In any form. I don't care about the collateral damage in the services and sites they 'support'.

When I ask around me people don't really have a very nuanced view either, though they're not as hostile as me, most of them just believe it is unavoidable. They don't have the skills I have in ad avoidance. But they don't have any kind of ethical concerns.


Internet advertising is a race to the bottom. If you're not using scummy tactics then your competitors will, and you lose money -- or your entire business.

I can't remember the last time I was exposed to respectful ads. My home PiHole deny-lists keep growing in size and this will continue unless the internet at large changes. Which I don't believe it will, barring any civilization-wide disaster.


> I can't remember the last time I was exposed to respectful ads.

There are still some out there, or at least some that aren't actively disrespectful. At least sponsor spots in podcasts don't stalk me online, etc, at least when they are honest about what is happening¹. They are very much in the minority though.

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[1] The 3D printing “community” on youtube is rife with “personal” recommendations that are obviously paid for but try to look more organic. “Today I'll test if you _really_ need to dry your PLA filament rolls, in a video sponsored by the company that makes one of the dryers I'll be testing…”


I still have some respect for that form of advertising though. At least they are not actively trying to be pieces of crap. :)




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