In 2024, Dermacare was sued for having data collection tools on their website that sold patients' private data to Google and Meta, which I can't imagine Duncan being thrilled about given the things he's saying.
In 2024, Dermacare was sued for having data collection tools on their website that sold patients' private data to Google and Meta, which I can't imagine Duncan being thrilled about given the things he's saying.
Oh, that's a very common thing now. A lot of games, they are heavily incentivizing linking your social media accounts to your game accounts and letting them see your contacts, your friends list. Well, because they want all that data, they want to know who they can market to. They want to see what your demographics are. They want to say, what does this customer like?
That's a problem because we didn't know when we all signed up for it that data was going to be this massive commodity. Not only is it very valuable, but then it gives them insane power. The people that have all that money and have all that power, now they're in control of Essentially, all social discourse.
The Trump administration is silently employing Palantir to gather personal data of each American, raising privacy, data misuse concerns. So this is a different thing. So what is it doing? So this is totally different than the Israeli thing, right? Okay, yeah. Okay. I guess I got a mix. No worries, but they're both kind of creepy. Gather personal data of American citizens from various federal agencies, sparking concerns over privacy and potential misuse of personal data. So what is it doing? How is it doing this? Oh, I don't know. Does it say how it works? No. Capabilities of data organization and analysis could potentially enable the merging of information from various agencies, thereby creating detailed profiles of American citizens. The Trump administration, profiles curated by who? Right? It says citizen data from the government, including bank accounts. Go back to that. Did you see that? It says bank accounts. Where was it? Guys, guys, guys. Who signed off on this? Is this already implemented? I say, okay, access extensive citizen data from the government databases, including bank details, student debt, medical claims, claims, and disability status.
Also, that guy in New Zealand is a man named Barry Young who absolutely did not anonymize the data he released to dipshit sub-stack poster Steve Kirsch. Young stole data from Health New Zealand that did not show what Alex is claiming, but became active in disseminating and creating that narrative. And in the process, he released a fair amount of this private medical information to noted lunatic Steve Kirsch.
So there's the auctioning off of these assets, and included with InfoWars store. Part of the asset is customer information. Great! Right. Great! Part of the asset of InfoWars itself is the newsletter subscribers. Right. There is so much personal information of Alex's audience that is being auctioned off.
Yeah. And I think that if this goes bad, Alex's show could be like the biggest honeypot ever. Yeah. Accidentally.
And the concerns were addressed. A copy of the student's fingerprint is connected to a unique identifier, but the stored data isn't the actual fingerprint. Also, quote, parents who do not want their child fingerprinted may obtain an opt-out form.
In theory, anyone who signed up for her subscription service could have had their information stolen, which is just a gigantic bummer.
I guarantee that if I had a tiny bit of hacking ability, I could find his phone number. You can find anybody's private information really easily. Yeah. Based on all of the places that you would have dropped it. He probably put it on fucking Facebook. If you ever went to college, all of that information is really easily accessible. Like, a bunch of your... Well, I mean, we do know he only ever went to community college, and I'm assuming he's changed his cell phone since then. Well, right, but I mean, a lot of the... So they have his community college cell phone number? Sure, that could be what he said. They got it! It's real. I don't think cell phones were around back then, but be that as it may, but what I'm saying is a lot of these things, you end up filing information places, and a lot of your private information is much more accessible than people think. I've seen tons of news reports about this where just... Mid-level, basic hacking individuals, let's say. Not even the most evolved hackers are able to find tons and tons of private information about people, and not illegally. They're just able to find it.