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MrWiffles 21 hours ago [-]
With high resolution cameras, indefinite data retention and third party data leaks being a matter of when, not if, this seems like a perfect way to get your fingerprints stolen by organized crime syndicates worldwide. If not next year, then in 5-10 years. And when they get used for “something”, what happens when you go on vacation somewhere and you’re detained at that country’s border for a crime that happened N years before your very first entry into that country ever happened?
With as many Ph.D.s as there are at Google, you’d think they’d be smarter than to come up with this. Which is how you know the PMs are in charge, not the smart people.
intended 6 hours ago [-]
I wonder if anyone has thought about what happens if and when Google (or others) gets bought out.
No firm lasts forever.
drexlspivey 6 hours ago [-]
It is not possible to buy a 4 trillion public company
piva00 5 hours ago [-]
AOL used to be a US$ 200B public company, it was acquired by 4.4B.
Sun, Lucent, Yahoo all had massive valuations at their peak but eventually dwindled and got acquired.
It's always possible for a massively valued company to stumble, fall, and become a husk of what it once was. I don't think Google/Alphabet is immune to this even though their absurd cash cow from ads make it very unlikely at this exact moment.
xethos 5 hours ago [-]
I'm struggling not to be sarcastic here, as I'm not quite stoked about Canadian Tire owning most of what's left of Hudson's Bay Company. It's pretty undeniable proof that age and revenue will not make a company immortal or invulnerable though.
zigzag312 6 hours ago [-]
Even if the purchasing entity is backed by a foreign country?
sigmoid10 6 hours ago [-]
Valuations are not permanent. Amazon dropped 90% during the dotcom bubble. And there is always another financial crisis coming.
Cider9986 2 days ago [-]
I saw a post on the GrapheneOS forum of someone who was accosted by Google with this requirement, so they are certainly using it.
It's interesting the parallels of Google's recaptcha and Cloudflare turnstile.
Cloudflare is free, no image selector, allows VPNs and Tor for the most part, just 0 click with a good ip reputation and 1 click with a bad one.
Recaptcha is paid, trains waymos, sucks millions of hours of human time, asks for camera access, asks for a phone attestation, blocks VPNs/Tor.
Thank god less sites are using ReCAPTCHA.
Looking forward to some other solutions gaining prominence eventually as well.
Like that Anime girl one.
lesostep 3 hours ago [-]
Cloudflare allows you to pass with 1 click? I had as many as 10 minutes of solving capchas on ot before turning away
I'm pretty sure, Cloudflare capchas could be endless
addandsubtract 2 hours ago [-]
As soon as I get more than 2 captchas, I'm out. At that point, I'm assuming they're just testing my patience to train their models. Switching VPN servers is much more effective.
potus_kushner 42 minutes ago [-]
yeah, they are as soon as you use a non-mainstream browser. never got past cloudflare with the Pale Moon browser, for instance. seeing a site like reclaimthenet - fighting for a free internet - gated behind cloudflare struck me as odd, to say the least. i just had to prove that i'm not a bot to be able to read the article.
anal_reactor 3 hours ago [-]
CloudFlare captcha blocks my Opera Mobile unless I switch the user agent back to mobile.
If a web requires me to do this to access it, I simply refuse.
The last time I needed some web was my electricity company - sent them a ticket with a complaint. They replied with some bs like "your browser is simply not supported" so I kept sending them the same ticket over and over again until I got a real response and it seems they decided to change the system.
To use my favorite quote: That's all it takes really, pressure, and time... :)
gib444 6 hours ago [-]
Companies do and will simply label customers who repeatedly "protest" in such a manner as "vexatious" and use that as a justification to deny service. Utilities will probably be last due to regulations around providing utilities but other important companies will do it.
_V_ 4 hours ago [-]
Then I save some money and give them to a different company :)
Forgeties79 6 hours ago [-]
Yeah I’ve already warned my discord friends that the moment I have to show my ID I’m out of there without a goodbye. It sucks, but I just can’t compromise further. Personal ID’s are an absolute red line.
uproarchat 3 hours ago [-]
Ahem, plenty of Discord alternatives out there ;) Nothing wrong with making a backup or bridge!
Forgeties79 3 hours ago [-]
[dead]
_V_ 4 hours ago [-]
Yeah, for some reason I ran into that issue, too. I'm not giving my governmental ID to some random corporation. If that means I can't use their services, then so be it.
Someone always has to be the first to say "no thanks" to their bs.
Forgeties79 3 hours ago [-]
Yeah I basically told my discord friends that I’m not going to be held hostage with the threat of losing contact with them, so if they want to communicate with me they can hit me up by other means which I shared.
nerdsniper 5 hours ago [-]
Also worth noting this could allow Google to know who is using whom's devices. E.g. if I let my sister use my device, then Google would know it's her hand.
Would it deny her hand's reCAPTCHA because it doesn't match my biometrics? Or would it allow her and just make a record in the google database that she was using my phone at 8:42PM ?
thisislife2 4 hours ago [-]
A few days back, Google reCaptcha suddenly showed me a QR code and asked me to scan it with my mobile to "verify" I was human. I was taken aback, and at first thought my system / browser had some malware that was messing with the Captcha ...
What if you have all that, but waving is problematic due to non-functional motor control?
augment_me 6 hours ago [-]
You are then our of the normal probability distribution and out of luck, it's not profitable to cater for you for the company.
ta93754829 1 days ago [-]
can't even do onlyfans
addandsubtract 2 hours ago [-]
They said hands, not feet.
khurs 6 hours ago [-]
There will be an Accessibility options? hear a phrase and repeat it or similar
outside1234 2 days ago [-]
SYNTAX ERROR
Terr_ 2 days ago [-]
Imagine getting your hand wrongly blacklisted as a fake, and then someday down the road you make a wrong gesture during an online interview and now your real-name is also on the suspicion list.
addandsubtract 2 hours ago [-]
Or Palantir films your hands while trying to enter a venue, border, or voting booth.
nerdsniper 2 days ago [-]
Imagine you don’t have a hand.
tosti 5 hours ago [-]
New startup idea: Captcha-proof mock hands that wave with remote control http json api. You could sell a small diorama box with camera and everything as an upgrade.
ButlerianJihad 1 days ago [-]
As a Man of Culture, my hand ranks highly among my most valuable appendages!
oniony 6 hours ago [-]
I bet you're also not an ambiturner.
gitowiec 6 hours ago [-]
We have to have ability to stream video instead of accepting browsers webcam request. I propose Firefox to go first with the implantation. I would like to automate it with AI to stream every time a different video with different person
smalltorch 2 days ago [-]
I could see this being privacy friendly if the user could see exactly what Google was using.
For instance, terminalcam, gives just enough data to reveal liveness without necessarily giving enough information about identity.
Well, create a virtual camera device with 120x80 resolution and give Ggl access to that and only that.
jimmy76615 2 days ago [-]
Doesn't surprise me at all and seems like a good solution to the problem of human verification. It won't take long for AI to catch up to that, but this captcha method might hold for a couple of months.
Not sure what problem everybody here is having with this. The alternative would be device certificate stuff (ala did Apple sign for this being a proper Apple device?). Having to shake your hand sounds a lot more privacy friendly.
Are you guys seriously worried that Google is gonna steal your secret handshakes?
SllX 6 hours ago [-]
Finding additional ways to waste more of people’s time on the web isn’t a good solution to anything. Doing so in a privacy invading way from a company that has a vested interest in collecting as much data as possible, exhausting all utility from it and butters its bread in an industry which specifically is built around disrespecting the time of other people is just never going to fly.
Like seriously, if I have to turn on a camera to get through a recaptcha then the website doing it can fuck right the hell off with extreme prejudice. My web browser is not allowed to access my cameras for any reason, no exceptions.
pfortuny 6 hours ago [-]
Well, actually I am worried about it. It needs to happen just once. Or for google to have a different kind of CEO (as companies are wont to).
Almondsetat 5 hours ago [-]
>this captcha method might hold for a couple of months
So stripping away user privacy even more is justified for implementing an already obsolete verification method?
anal_reactor 2 hours ago [-]
Is it okay if I show my penis. I've checked and the fingerprint scanner also registers my ballsack correctly.
aix1 1 days ago [-]
> Not sure what problem everybody here is having with this.
For starters, it's extremely invasive (camera on to pay a bill - wtf?), has unclear privacy implications and questionable accessibility (to put it mildly).
6 hours ago [-]
outside1234 2 days ago [-]
Is it weird that my reaction to all of this is that I am just going to drop these websites when they ask me for this?
gbil 6 hours ago [-]
I've already dropped sites/services where annoyance-invasion/usefulness ratio is above 50% but I'm afraid it will be unavoidable in some cases.
At least I know what kind of hand gesture they will get first :)
Cider9986 2 days ago [-]
No, but what would you do if it's a government required service?
toxic72 1 days ago [-]
The IRS wanted a full 3d scan of my face to prove identity AFTER I already had a working account used every year for the past 3+ years.
They asked for feedback after I canceled the login, I gave very candid feedback in a form.
Then they asked if I would give an interview.
You know why I wanted to log in? To claim a $7 refund.
They ended up mailing it.
gib444 6 hours ago [-]
I wonder if the identity requirements are lowered if you owe them money?
Cthulhu_ 6 hours ago [-]
Then you sign in using your eID which is both highly secure and tied to your personal identity. Government services don't need 3rd party are-you-a-human verification, not when your account is tied to your identity.
(this is from the Netherlands where you can use digID [0] to sign into government services and ID-bound 3rd parties like insurance, mortgages, pensions etc)
I thought recently there was a kerfuffle about DigiD being tied to an American data farming company
greyface- 6 hours ago [-]
Then I would opt not to use the computer for this task, and instead call, visit, mail, or fax the government agency.
expedition32 1 days ago [-]
Oh I wish! Had to solve one in order to pay a bill.
The internet is dead.
Leonard_of_Q 6 hours ago [-]
That's like saying the roads are dead because people built strip malls and McDonald's everywhere. They're ugly and mostly annoying but there's still those roads leading to the paths into the mountains, ready for anyone who knows how to find them.
risit 6 hours ago [-]
Just as with paywalls, it's just easier to close the page if prompted with this. Many things are not that interesting if an effort is required.
add-sub-mul-div 2 days ago [-]
The non-mandatory internet that requires any captcha at all is becoming non-existent to me.
tensegrist 2 days ago [-]
can a unique fingerprint (no pun intended) be extracted from hand geometry
28304283409234 6 hours ago [-]
What camera?
catfish-1234 2 days ago [-]
My openclaw agent gonna find some way around it.
SomeUserName432 6 hours ago [-]
Sir, that is a claw, not a hand.
khurs 6 hours ago [-]
I'm also now seeing a 'scan this QR code' captcha when using Archive.org links.
Can't be bothered... so instead using the accessibility option of listening to a phrase instead.
altairprime 6 hours ago [-]
It is extremely disappointing to see Reclaim’s reporting whiff so badly on this. Yeah, they got the gist of the outrage, but they missed the real grift underneath. They slipped a massive loophole under the radar here and Reclaim misses it entirely: Google promised to delete the footage, but not the data derived from the footage. To use 23andme as an analogy, the company tended to dispose of old genetic sample kits after a while, but retained the derived data from those kits identifiably associated with specific people. Google is only promising to dispose of the costly data to store, the raw biometric material that takes up precious terabytes, but unlike 23andme will never voluntarily permit you to review and remove the results of their biometric analysis if you. Reclaim, if you’re reading this, here’s what you missed:
https://docs.cloud.google.com/recaptcha/docs/hand-gesture-ve...
> Google does not retain any images or videos of a user's hand gestures
This is the sole statement of data deletion provided, and nowhere does Google state any other retention policy for derivations whatsoever, whether anonymized or associated, from that hand data; referring instead to the generic terms of service privacy policy:
> Other data is deleted or anonymized automatically
The privacy policy does not have a specific callout for biometric derivations, and so they may choose to anonymize rather than delete your biometric data.
> some data we retain for longer periods of time when necessary for legitimate business or legal purposes, such as security, fraud and abuse prevention
Recaptcha exists for the exlclusice purpose of security, fraud and abuse prevention, and so by this clause they may retain your identified hand scan biometrics for as long as they see fit.
> We will share personal information outside of Google if we have a good-faith belief that disclosure of the information is reasonabl[e]
They will give your identified hand biometrics upon request to anyone who can make a convincing case to them.
> We may share non-personally identifiable information publicly and with our partners
And they grant themselves the right to start selling their dataset of humanity’s hand biometrics for personal profit with none shared back to those whose biometrics are now a commodity to be bought and sold.
(Note that Google is not alone in this; see also gestures at much of tech. But that’s no excuse for the grift going unreported by a journalistic entity that’s been around long enough to know better how these reassurance-by-omission scams work. I was already upset with Google but I still expect better of those trying to stop them.)
codingdave 5 hours ago [-]
> This is a company whose business runs on gathering and monetizing personal data
Seems like they covered your points just fine. They just did it succinctly and trusted the reader to understand the broader implications.
With as many Ph.D.s as there are at Google, you’d think they’d be smarter than to come up with this. Which is how you know the PMs are in charge, not the smart people.
No firm lasts forever.
Sun, Lucent, Yahoo all had massive valuations at their peak but eventually dwindled and got acquired.
It's always possible for a massively valued company to stumble, fall, and become a husk of what it once was. I don't think Google/Alphabet is immune to this even though their absurd cash cow from ads make it very unlikely at this exact moment.
It's interesting the parallels of Google's recaptcha and Cloudflare turnstile.
Cloudflare is free, no image selector, allows VPNs and Tor for the most part, just 0 click with a good ip reputation and 1 click with a bad one.
Recaptcha is paid, trains waymos, sucks millions of hours of human time, asks for camera access, asks for a phone attestation, blocks VPNs/Tor.
Thank god less sites are using ReCAPTCHA.
Looking forward to some other solutions gaining prominence eventually as well.
Like that Anime girl one.
I'm pretty sure, Cloudflare capchas could be endless
https://m.xkcd.com/2228/
If a web requires me to do this to access it, I simply refuse.
The last time I needed some web was my electricity company - sent them a ticket with a complaint. They replied with some bs like "your browser is simply not supported" so I kept sending them the same ticket over and over again until I got a real response and it seems they decided to change the system.
To use my favorite quote: That's all it takes really, pressure, and time... :)
Someone always has to be the first to say "no thanks" to their bs.
Would it deny her hand's reCAPTCHA because it doesn't match my biometrics? Or would it allow her and just make a record in the google database that she was using my phone at 8:42PM ?
(Apparently, this started appearing from last month - https://cybernews.com/privacy/google-qr-code-recaptcha-requi... ).
For instance, terminalcam, gives just enough data to reveal liveness without necessarily giving enough information about identity.
https://gitlab.com/here_forawhile/terminalcam
Not sure what problem everybody here is having with this. The alternative would be device certificate stuff (ala did Apple sign for this being a proper Apple device?). Having to shake your hand sounds a lot more privacy friendly. Are you guys seriously worried that Google is gonna steal your secret handshakes?
Like seriously, if I have to turn on a camera to get through a recaptcha then the website doing it can fuck right the hell off with extreme prejudice. My web browser is not allowed to access my cameras for any reason, no exceptions.
So stripping away user privacy even more is justified for implementing an already obsolete verification method?
For starters, it's extremely invasive (camera on to pay a bill - wtf?), has unclear privacy implications and questionable accessibility (to put it mildly).
At least I know what kind of hand gesture they will get first :)
They asked for feedback after I canceled the login, I gave very candid feedback in a form.
Then they asked if I would give an interview.
You know why I wanted to log in? To claim a $7 refund.
They ended up mailing it.
(this is from the Netherlands where you can use digID [0] to sign into government services and ID-bound 3rd parties like insurance, mortgages, pensions etc)
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DigiD
The internet is dead.
Can't be bothered... so instead using the accessibility option of listening to a phrase instead.
> Google does not retain any images or videos of a user's hand gestures
This is the sole statement of data deletion provided, and nowhere does Google state any other retention policy for derivations whatsoever, whether anonymized or associated, from that hand data; referring instead to the generic terms of service privacy policy:
> Other data is deleted or anonymized automatically
The privacy policy does not have a specific callout for biometric derivations, and so they may choose to anonymize rather than delete your biometric data.
> some data we retain for longer periods of time when necessary for legitimate business or legal purposes, such as security, fraud and abuse prevention
Recaptcha exists for the exlclusice purpose of security, fraud and abuse prevention, and so by this clause they may retain your identified hand scan biometrics for as long as they see fit.
> We will share personal information outside of Google if we have a good-faith belief that disclosure of the information is reasonabl[e]
They will give your identified hand biometrics upon request to anyone who can make a convincing case to them.
> We may share non-personally identifiable information publicly and with our partners
And they grant themselves the right to start selling their dataset of humanity’s hand biometrics for personal profit with none shared back to those whose biometrics are now a commodity to be bought and sold.
(Note that Google is not alone in this; see also gestures at much of tech. But that’s no excuse for the grift going unreported by a journalistic entity that’s been around long enough to know better how these reassurance-by-omission scams work. I was already upset with Google but I still expect better of those trying to stop them.)
Seems like they covered your points just fine. They just did it succinctly and trusted the reader to understand the broader implications.