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Thoughts on Kagi?
(lemmy.world)
Privacy has become a very important issue in modern society, with companies and governments constantly abusing their power, more and more people are waking up to the importance of digital privacy.
In this community everyone is welcome to post links and discuss topics related to privacy.
much thanks to @gary_host_laptop for the logo design :)
So? It exists, unlike the vision in the manifesto. Since the manifesto can be interpreted in many ways (despite what you might claim), I think this feature can be helpful to show the Kagi intentions, since they invested work into it no? They could have build data collection and automated ranking based on your clicks, they didn't.
Not sure what the argument is. The fact that people voluntary give data (for completely different reasons that do not benefit those users directly, but under the implicit blackmail to use the service)? I have no objections anyway against Facebook collecting the data that users submit voluntarily and that is disclosed by the policy. The problem is in the data inferred, in the behavioral data collected, which are much more sneaky, and in those collected about non users (shadow profiles through the pixel etc.). You putting Facebook and an imaginary future Kagi in the same pot, in my opinion, is completely out of place.
I love how you downplay what Kagi said they want their product to become. Elsewhere, you insist we must trust their privacy policy with blind faith. These two opinions are contradictory; you want people to simultaneously believe and disbelieve Kagi.
It doesn't make sense.... unless all your opinions stem from the presumption that Kagi is unquestionably good.
Regarding "Dumb Fucks": Zuckerberg described exactly what Kagi Corp wants their users to do.
The manifesto is actually a future vision. And again, you are interpreting it in your own way.
At the same time, you are completely ignoring:
Because obviously who cares of facts, right? You have your own interpretation of a sentence which starts with "in the future we will have" and that counts more than anything.
Also, can you please share to me the quote where I say that I need to blindly trust the privacy policy? Thanks.
Because I remember to have said in various comments that the privacy policy is a legally binding document, and that I can make a report to a data protection authority if I suspect they are violating them, so that they will be audited. Also, guess what! The manifesto is not a legally binding document that they need to respond of, the privacy policy is. Nobody can hold them accountable if "in the future there will not be" all that stuff that are mentioned in the manifesto, but they are accountable already today for what they put in the privacy policy.
Do you see the difference?
No, I'm engaging in a good faith effort to find the corporation's words, while you downplay and reinterpret them at every turn.
I know you won't bother to look, but for my own personal amusement, Kagi Corp is clear in page after page they care about AI not privacy. Here's a third page demonstrating this:
And this is rather ironic too:
You are really moving the goal post eh
Developing AI feature does not mean anything in itself. None of the AI features they built do anything at all in a personalized way. For sure they seem very invested into integrating AI in their product, but so far no data is used, and all the AI features are simply summarizers and research assistants. What is this supposed to prove?
I will make it simpler anyway:
What they wrote in a manifesto is a vague expression of what will happen in a non-specified future. If the whole AI fad will fade in a year, it won't happen. In addition, we have no idea of what specifically they are going to build, we have no idea of what the impact on privacy is, what are the specific implementation choices they will take and many other things. Without all of this, your dystopian interpretation is purely arbitrary.
Ironic how? Saying that a document is binding doesn't mean blindly trusting it, it means that I know the power it holds, and it means it gives the power to get their ass audited and potentially fined on that basis if anybody doesn't trust them.
Your attempt to mess with the meaning of my sentences is honestly gross. Being aware of the fact that a company is accountable has nothing do to with blind trust.
Just to sum it up, your arguments so far are that:
This somehow leads you to the conclusion that they are building some dystopian nightmare in which they get your data and build a bubble around you.
My arguments are that:
The reality is: we don't know. It might be that they will build something like you say, but the current track record doesn't give me any reason to think they will. I, and I am sure a substantial percentage of their user base, use their product specifically because they are good and because they are user-centric and privacy focused. If they change posture, I would dump them in a second, and a search engine is not inherently something that locks you in (like an email). At the moment they deliver, and I am all-in for supporting businesses that use revenue models that are in opposition to ad-driven models and don't rely on free labor. I do believe that economic and systemic incentive are the major reasons why companies are destroying user-privacy, I don't thing there is any inherent evil. That's why I can't really understand how a business which depends on users paying (kagi) can be compared to one that depends on advertisers paying (meta), where users (their data) are just a part of a product.
Like, even if we assume that what's written in the manifesto comes to life, if the data is collected by the company and only, exclusively, used to customize the AI in the way I want (not to tune it to sell me shit I don't need), within the scope I need, with the data I choose to give, with full awareness of the implication, where is the problem? This is not a dystopia. The dystopia is if google builds the same tool and tunes it automatically so that it benefits whoever pays google (not users, but the ones who want to sell you shit). If a tool is truly making my own interests and the company interest is simply that I find the tool useful, without additional goals (ad impressions, visits to pages, product sold), then that's completely acceptable in my view.
And now I will conclude this conversation, because I said what I had to, and I don't see progress.
You're right. We aren't getting anywhere. I'm trying to explain how 2 + 2 = 4, but you keep insisting it's zero.
Kagi Dot AI, with a past, present and future in AI, is the first part of the equation.
Private data consumption and regurgitation, which Kagi is allegedly not injecting into its AI right now, is the other part.
Look at them side by side and you see what the company wants to do, clear as day. But for some reason, you repeatedly insist there's nothing there.
To be clear, you want a venture capital corporation to keep you in your filter bubble regarding your political beliefs, your corporate brand choices, your political beliefs, your philosophical beliefs, etc?
The dystopia is already here for you.
And even if you feel comfortable feeding all this private data into a soulless corporation, and you're not worried about data breaches, why would you evangelize that kind of product on a privacy forum?
Thankfully, I kagi is not a VC-funded corp. The latest investment round was for 670k, pennies, from 42 investors, which means an average of less than 20k/investor (they also mention that most are kagi users too but who knows).
Also, it depends on what it means "being kept in a filter bubble". If I build my own bubble according to my own criteria (I don't want to see blogs filled with trackers, I want articles from reputable sources - I.e. what I consider reputable, if I am searching for code I only want rust because that's what I am using right now, etc.) and I have the option to choose when to look outside, then yes, I think it's OK. We all already do that anyway, if I see an article from fox news I won't even open it, if on the same topic I see something from somewhere else. That said, there are times where I can choose to read fox news specifically to see what conservatives think.
The crux of it all is: who is in charge? And what happens with that data? If the answers are "me" and "nothing", then it's something I consider acceptable. It doesn't mean I would use it or that I would use it for everything.
First, I am not evangelizing anything. That product doesn't even exist, I am simply speculating on its existence and the potential scenarios.
Second: privacy means that the data is not accessed or used by unintended parties and is not misused by the intended ones. Focus on unintended. Privacy does not mean that no data is gathered in any case, even though this is often the best way to ensure there is no misuse. This is also completely compatible with the idea that if I can choose which data to give, and whether I want to give it at all (and of course deleting it), and that data is not used for anything else than what I want it to be used for, then my privacy is completely protected.