Meta tried to gain a competitive advantage over its competitors, including Snapchat and later Amazon and YouTube, by analyzing the network traffic of how its users were interacting with Meta’s competitors. Given these apps’ use of encryption, Facebook needed to develop special technology to get around it.

Facebook’s engineers solution was to use Onavo, a VPN-like service that Facebook acquired in 2013. In 2019, Facebook shut down Onavo after a TechCrunch investigation revealed that Facebook had been secretly paying teenagers to use Onavo so the company could access all of their web activity.

After Zuckerberg’s email, the Onavo team took on the project and a month later proposed a solution: so-called kits that can be installed on iOS and Android that intercept traffic for specific subdomains, “allowing us to read what would otherwise be encrypted traffic so we can measure in-app usage,” read an email from July 2016. “This is a ‘man-in-the-middle’ approach.”

A man-in-the-middle attack — nowadays also called adversary-in-the-middle — is an attack where hackers intercept internet traffic flowing from one device to another over a network. When the network traffic is unencrypted, this type of attack allows the hackers to read the data inside, such as usernames, passwords, and other in-app activity.

    • @[email protected]
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      138 months ago

      Please tell me what governing body exists for the fediverse that would let us deny them access?

      • @[email protected]
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        768 months ago

        How is this a relevant question? Nobody said anything about some governing body. There have been discussions on many instances about whether to federate with them or not, and it’s accurate to say that some people think we should.

        • @[email protected]
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          238 months ago

          For example, I’m personally of the opinion that instances should be allowed to federate until they prove themselves to be bad actors, but in Meta’s case there’s a lot of existing evidence that shows they shouldn’t be allowed to federate in the first instance.

        • @[email protected]
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          8 months ago

          its also accurate to say some people are fucking idiots and think we should federate.

          on the wax winged hope in hell that the bad actor suddenly, miraculously, becomes a good actor…for reasons no one can explain.

      • @[email protected]
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        248 months ago

        Do you know how the Fediverse works? Instance maintainers who are less than thrilled with Meta can choose to defederate from Threads.

        • @[email protected]
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          118 months ago

          Exactly my point. It’d be on an instance by instance basis, there is no “singular group” that can block them from the entire fediverse.

          • knightly the Sneptaur
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            138 months ago

            The whole point of federation is that you aren’t locked in the sinking ship. If everyone is defederating from your instance you can move to a better one.

            • @[email protected]
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              118 months ago

              Yes, but to realistically keep Threads from federating and utilizing people’s posts, every single instance owner would have to defederate. 1) that’s not likely, and 2) that’s a unilateral decision by the instance owner. I’m looking at things from a realistic standpoint, not an idealistic one.

      • @[email protected]
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        38 months ago

        Im more specifically thinking about the big ones when this debate was going on about a couple of months ago.

      • @[email protected]
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        14 months ago

        Diaspora allows for whitelisting visibility of posts to certain users(and servers… depending on where users are hosted)

    • @[email protected]
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      88 months ago

      honest question: why does it matter? all data in any fediverse project is public anyways

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        8 months ago

        For me it’s not really about the data, it’s unforseen malicious maneuvers outside data. Sabotaging instances, manipulating feeds for their gain, or try to still centralize the fediverse undermining the whole concept. My point is, we don’t know what bad thing they could/would do, they are creative. But we sure as fuck know it’s an evil organization and they can’t be trusted.

        • @[email protected]
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          38 months ago

          that’s fair. I fully believe they could pull some fuckery that would make everything worse