Anonymous ID: a32b15 May 12, 2018, 11:34 a.m. No.1385833   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Just a few of the 170 Facebook related memes that are available in our library.

 

Q RESEARCH GRAPHICS LIBRARY

https://mega.nz/#F!XtNhURSb!1Mdrvt-Y_onBw5VlFDRdCQ

18,000+ memes and infographs, keyword searchable, partially organized by topic

 

The way I search the library (you can do this too) is this. I have a local copy of everything. I type in a few characters of a search word and my app shows all the files whose names contain that text string. Drag and drop to "Select/drop/paste files here" Quick Reply form. Very quick & easy. (Ubuntu - standard Nautilus file manager app)

Anonymous ID: a32b15 May 12, 2018, 11:41 a.m. No.1385928   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6061

>>1385747

Most of the preinstalled smartphone apps ask the user to "consent" to numerous egregious privacy violations like whether the phone is in use or not, use the camera, copy user's photos, what network attached to, address book or phone book, etc. You can't use these apps unless you "consent".

From the very limited synopsis in the article, apparently this lawsuit makes the point that such "consent" isn't really consent because ordinary users did not understand the depth of the privacy violation or the consequences of their consent, and that what was collected and the uses it was put to far exceeded the permissions requested/granted.