Congratulations. Starting this year i got rid of facebook account but not completely because messenger is probably most popular messaging app in my country for some reason but still it is a great feeling
old google accounts that have been regularly used for their entire existence are whitelisted by youtube's age assurance, because if the google account is beyond like...10 years old and has been getting continuous use the entire time then there's no way it belongs to a kid anymore
that's why I kind of regret deleting my older Gmail addresses, the one I use to watch youtube is still pretty old over 15 years. but I had one google account that would be 19 years old by now
so compartmentalize it for just watching youtube. make a new profile on your privacy-friendly web browser just for that, load that profile up with all the annoyance blocking things you need and leave the main daily-driver profile free from google.
and don't use any of google's services on mobile if you can
i've already done the browser stuff you recommended leveraging container tabs on firefox.
but it doesn't seem matter: i recently discovered a facebook account that i forgotten i had created 15ish years ago tied to a secondary gmail account that i don't use anywhere besides firefox in private mode a dozen or so times per year at the most on a vpn. while using that facebook account, i got an event reminder for a party that i bought a ticket to a few weeks back using my somewhat recently created proton email address along with an almost equally recent debit card & bank account that i opened a few months ago.
it makes me think that server side tracking is now more effective than anything you can do at your end.
You got container tabs to consistently work? Every time I use them they get reset to the default 4. Right now I'm using brave with multiple profiles. I block all of youtube's ads out of spite now
the container tabs will disappear when i uninstall/reinstall firefox, but i have firefox setup to delete all out browsing data every time i open & close tabs & firefox itself so i've become dependent on the container tabs to store my login sessions for the worrisome sites that i use.
Wait, what is the age assurance thing? I thought just logging in was enough to make all age gates disappear, I didn't realize there was anything special about my account (other than it being tied to my personal email instead of a Gmail address).
a few months ago, youtube implemented AI-based age assurance where to prove you're an adult if the AI thought you were underage, you could either
dox yourself by uploading an ID that they absolutely WILL keep on file forever and will inevitably leak when they get hacked in the future
add a credit card to your account so they can trick you into paying for youtube premium when you accidentally click on something in the future or 3. if your account is old enough and has gotten continuous consistent use then they'll just go with that
The media is evil and didn't give the story any attention
What the fuck, how is this the first time I'm hearing about this... I was thinking of deleting my account (with no phone or ID tied to it), I guess I'm keeping it for now.
I'd suggest to recover your account and burn it first: Register in a hell amount of random services for a few weeks to make it confuse about you, so their data about you will be imprecise which has no much value for them.
BUT... don't be too obvious, make it look like a legit behavior. We must assume they can spot a timestamp when you started burning it.
I say that because I did the same, straight deleted my Google account, but I wish I realized it'd be better to burn it first.
Anyway, not a mandatory thing, your data will become useless eventually, up to date data is more valuable for them than outdated data. They probably just ignore/delete old deleted accounts indeed, since it has each time less updated info.
Good luck! I just decided to rip the bandage off instead of going through my accounts. I've been self-hosting for several years now, and I have replacements for all Google apps. The only thing I'd been using it for was YouTube, but that site is definitely compromising for people with certain political opinions.
A friend told me he filled his google drive with a lot of small and random data in a cryptomator container. But he was not able to fill the google calendar and contacts with random data.
His Idea was, that after deleting there is a possibility that google only backup the last snapshot of his data and throw away the older backups. But only empty the account would not work.
Seems a legit idea, but what an effort 😮. There seem no tool that would do that for you.
I assume that the account is not usable after this. So it is a logical delete and the physical delete is scheduled. I don't know what would be a better way to phrase it, that would not confuse the users.
I am not trying to defend google, I just had similar UX issues at work.
Correct. Google is banking on users getting withdrawl and crawling back. They all do the same thing, like Meta products. They give you 30 days before deletion because they know most people are addicted and will recover their accounts.
Could be, but it's more likely that the delete gets put into a message queue and gets processed when the deletion service can handle it. These large deletions are computationally expensive.
Its similar to why the exports take so long to process
It's like how most people call moving a file into the trash can "deleting." It is deleted (in a sense), but you can still recover it if you want before the trash can gets emptied.
Or like how even you can actually delet a file from the disk but still be able to recover it before the disk space is overwritten by other files. I'm not saying that this is what Google does when you recover a freshly deleted account (most likely not), but what I'm trying to say with these two examples is that being able to be recovered is not a contradiction with having been deleted
Also I don't get why you take problem with this. It's not like it's another loop to jump through to get to delete the account?
I don’t know how it works for Google but the moment they invoiced you once they might be able to or more precisely they might have to nevertheless keep yr data for years for tax reasons… And then some because they might have to comply with obscure data retention laws or such. But as of the moment this deletion happens you might not be able to access it anymore indeed.
I have Kubuntu on a VM. I feel like I need to buy another device right now, just to pull it off. It takes me basically all day to do one hour of work, because idk why...I'm totally fucked. So I'm afraid of messing up the transition.
I'm already used to the sudo, apt, and npm package nonsense that everyone has to deal with.
I already accepted that it will always be broken, there will always be more workarounds, and one type might fuck up my entire OS (happened already).
I hear ya, getting into it can be messy. And having a VM on the side is a good choice.
My current idea of a solid setup to manage long term:
*A main machine that has a bare-bones, lightweight Distro on it. Just the stuff you need to work + a VM program to run:
VM1: a copy of your main OS, test stuff out here first if you think it’s risky.
VM2: big tech corp spy software IF you need it. (Keep that sucker offline)
(And make backups/snapshots of your installation every once in a while).
If you have it: second machine: this one is for degoogling ect, save your social media stuff here before you take it out back.
If you have it: 3rd machine to run as a personal server (working on that myself)
This can all be old gear. In the process of getting to know Linux better and better (which is an ongoing process for all of us) you’ll get more and more fluent.
Congratulations. I have mine still active for 2 years for email forwarding...I think I should have caught all residual services by now and switched the email adress for them. Photos are transferred to selfhosted Immich, Files on nextcloud and Filen. Maybe I should find some time for the final deletion then?
That's something to do while we still can, Instagram doesn't let me delete my own account :/ Tried reaching the support multiple times, I've been completely ignored
i used an instagram scraper tool with an account, at some point they suspended the account and required my ID. I obviously refused and just let it rot, at some point they deleted my account.
After how much time? I was banned because of using third party client, I did the kyc process at the time because I wanted to delete the account but still I could not access...
It's been years for me and they didn't delete it yet.
You might get better results by going outside their channels and using legal options. Like not through the courts, but I think some jurisdictions have a law that you data must be deleted if a request is sent in writing or something like that. You might also be able to request they send you all the data they have (though this might cost money because they print it and mail it). I remember someone did that with their Tinder data for some article about how shitty Tinder is, though it depends on where you live.
I used instaloader to scrape about 5 profiles (my friends, ofc i have their permission) every day (was it called story? the 24h expiring thing). occasionally the token(?) saved in instaloader would expire and display their warning saying there was "Suspicious activity" or something, so i setup a simple script to run firefox to login and extract cookies from it every time. Had that running for some weeks and it was permabanned
I see it as fate. I switched credit cards and wanted to register my new one on Meta but their system would not let me enter a Canadian postal code. My solution is to let the account expire in April (due to non-account payment because the credit card on file no longer exists) and sell my Quest 3s, otherwise they would have had me for another year. My days of troubleshooting or trying to get around bad design are over. Life is too short and VR, while fun, isn't fun enough for me to make the time sacrifices required to keep going. The bloom is off of the VR rose.
I have a quest 3 but I'm not paying meta a dime for anything beyond the headset. It's much cheaper to buy games on Steam if that setup works for you. There are also apps like apprenticeVR that basically let you download and install any APK for games to play then directly on the headset.
Recently apprenticeVR gave me some issues reaching the servers, but it looks like there are some forks made recently to provide a fix until the main project incorporates something:
My apprenticeVR won't work, it says it can't access this service: https://go.vrpyourself.online When I got to the address, I am redirected to a website address selling service. I think the VRP serv...
My children's schools and after-school extracurricular clubs (including ones offered by the local police department) still are held hostage by Alphabet, forcing me to also maintain an account with them. But... I don't need to use it for anything else.
Any small-to-medium paid email hoster. Because if not paid, you are the product. And large ones usually want both, your money and your data/advertising.
I use mailbox.org, and it's been good. I used tutanota for a while, but the fact that I couldn't use any email clients (they have their own now I've heard) made me switch. It's also why I didn't go with Proton, since you have to pay the $10/mo plan (I think) to do it with them.
Bekijk je favoriete video's, luister naar de muziek die je leuk vindt, upload originele content en deel alles met vrienden, familie en anderen op YouTube.
This would be me if only there was some way to easily determine where I have used my @gmail address in the past 20 years. I have already set up another address that I own myself and have moved a bunch of stuff over, but I don't want to lose access to the rest of my accounts tied to my Gmail address.
Although I suppose I could go through my Keepass and list all logins that use my gmail, then chip away at that....
It does, but that still means Google has access to all my accounts related email until I move everything over. I suppose it's a good backstop though, thanks for the tip
That's a smart way of going about it. I threw caution to the wind because I stopped using my Google account for services years ago. We'll see how that affects things in the future.
You can setup a rule in Gmail, and tag them when they get to your new inbox. Use Gmail to add a junk CC, or something if the new provider doesn't have strong automation capabilities.
Then use the tags to go back and change the email on file (if necessary).
After a year if they haven't contacted you then they obviously aren't that important.
I found a lot of emails but I didn't find a lot of emails I cared about enough to update when I did this.
I'm using Thunderbird with IMAP to my own email server for my new email, but I can totally see something like that working to make the transition work. Thanks!
The other day I tried making a google account for an assignment my prof wanted (bro wanted presentation to be specifically on google slides and video uploaded on youtube). Google now required you to have a physical smartphone to make an account, you have to press a button that sends some kind of api that sends google an sms from your phone.
I am in the process of figuring out which things are still tied to my old Google email address (I have been forwarding my emails from it for the last year and changing each account to unique aliases as I find them) so I can finally delete it for good.
Scott 🇨🇦🏴☠️
in reply to muxika • • •muxika
in reply to Scott 🇨🇦🏴☠️ • • •Fabrik872
in reply to muxika • • •Fokeu
in reply to Fabrik872 • • •Cantaloupe877
in reply to Fokeu • • •adarza
in reply to muxika • • •Law Abiding VPN User
in reply to muxika • • •old google accounts that have been regularly used for their entire existence are whitelisted by youtube's age assurance, because if the google account is beyond like...10 years old and has been getting continuous use the entire time then there's no way it belongs to a kid anymore
that's why I kind of regret deleting my older Gmail addresses, the one I use to watch youtube is still pretty old over 15 years. but I had one google account that would be 19 years old by now
eldavi
in reply to Law Abiding VPN User • • •mine is that old and i rue the day i became so dependent on it; so i suppose it's a good thing that i can't tell exactly when that happened. lol
Law Abiding VPN User
in reply to eldavi • • •so compartmentalize it for just watching youtube. make a new profile on your privacy-friendly web browser just for that, load that profile up with all the annoyance blocking things you need and leave the main daily-driver profile free from google.
and don't use any of google's services on mobile if you can
eldavi
in reply to Law Abiding VPN User • • •i've already done the browser stuff you recommended leveraging container tabs on firefox.
but it doesn't seem matter: i recently discovered a facebook account that i forgotten i had created 15ish years ago tied to a secondary gmail account that i don't use anywhere besides firefox in private mode a dozen or so times per year at the most on a vpn. while using that facebook account, i got an event reminder for a party that i bought a ticket to a few weeks back using my somewhat recently created proton email address along with an almost equally recent debit card & bank account that i opened a few months ago.
it makes me think that server side tracking is now more effective than anything you can do at your end.
Law Abiding VPN User
in reply to eldavi • • •eldavi
in reply to Law Abiding VPN User • • •KickMeElmo
in reply to Law Abiding VPN User • • •Law Abiding VPN User
in reply to KickMeElmo • • •a few months ago, youtube implemented AI-based age assurance where to prove you're an adult if the AI thought you were underage, you could either
or 3. if your account is old enough and has gotten continuous consistent use then they'll just go with that
The media is evil and didn't give the story any attention
balsoft
in reply to Law Abiding VPN User • • •Law Abiding VPN User
in reply to balsoft • • •Because the media is evil and none of that bullshit is about protecting kids, they just want us to dox ourselves so we're afraid to criticize anything
Vegafjord eo
in reply to muxika • • •CodenameDarlen
in reply to muxika • • •I'd suggest to recover your account and burn it first:
Register in a hell amount of random services for a few weeks to make it confuse about you, so their data about you will be imprecise which has no much value for them.
BUT... don't be too obvious, make it look like a legit behavior. We must assume they can spot a timestamp when you started burning it.
I say that because I did the same, straight deleted my Google account, but I wish I realized it'd be better to burn it first.
Anyway, not a mandatory thing, your data will become useless eventually, up to date data is more valuable for them than outdated data. They probably just ignore/delete old deleted accounts indeed, since it has each time less updated info.
MrSulu
in reply to muxika • • •FreddiesLantern
in reply to muxika • • •Congratulations!!!
I’m getting closer and closer to this goal myself.
muxika
in reply to FreddiesLantern • • •kossa
in reply to muxika • • •🙄
At least write "is scheduled to be deleted" to make the lie not as obvious.
like this
HeerlijkeDrop likes this.
Telex
in reply to kossa • • •VieuxQueb
in reply to Telex • • •Telex
in reply to VieuxQueb • • •emeralddawn45
in reply to Telex • • •ratatouille
in reply to emeralddawn45 • • •A friend told me he filled his google drive with a lot of small and random data in a cryptomator container.
But he was not able to fill the google calendar and contacts with random data.
His Idea was, that after deleting there is a possibility that google only backup the last snapshot of his data and throw away the older backups. But only empty the account would not work.
Seems a legit idea, but what an effort 😮. There seem no tool that would do that for you.
Rusty
in reply to kossa • • •I assume that the account is not usable after this. So it is a logical delete and the physical delete is scheduled. I don't know what would be a better way to phrase it, that would not confuse the users.
I am not trying to defend google, I just had similar UX issues at work.
Jack_Burton
in reply to Rusty • • •mmmac
in reply to Jack_Burton • • •Could be, but it's more likely that the delete gets put into a message queue and gets processed when the deletion service can handle it. These large deletions are computationally expensive.
Its similar to why the exports take so long to process
redparadise
in reply to Jack_Burton • • •randint
in reply to kossa • • •It's like how most people call moving a file into the trash can "deleting." It is deleted (in a sense), but you can still recover it if you want before the trash can gets emptied.
Or like how even you can actually delet a file from the disk but still be able to recover it before the disk space is overwritten by other files. I'm not saying that this is what Google does when you recover a freshly deleted account (most likely not), but what I'm trying to say with these two examples is that being able to be recovered is not a contradiction with having been deleted
Also I don't get why you take problem with this. It's not like it's another loop to jump through to get to delete the account?
saimen
in reply to kossa • • •a4ng3l
in reply to muxika • • •WorldsDumbestMan
in reply to muxika • • •FreddiesLantern
in reply to WorldsDumbestMan • • •Have you considered slowly transitioning to another account/service?
I’ve been going through my google account for almost a year now, taking my time to really deal with all that stuff so I can close it for good.
WorldsDumbestMan
in reply to FreddiesLantern • • •I have Kubuntu on a VM. I feel like I need to buy another device right now, just to pull it off. It takes me basically all day to do one hour of work, because idk why...I'm totally fucked. So I'm afraid of messing up the transition.
I'm already used to the sudo, apt, and npm package nonsense that everyone has to deal with.
I already accepted that it will always be broken, there will always be more workarounds, and one type might fuck up my entire OS (happened already).
EDIT: I did delete Paypal.
FreddiesLantern
in reply to WorldsDumbestMan • • •I hear ya, getting into it can be messy. And having a VM on the side is a good choice.
My current idea of a solid setup to manage long term:
*A main machine that has a bare-bones, lightweight Distro on it. Just the stuff you need to work + a VM program to run:
VM1: a copy of your main OS, test stuff out here first if you think it’s risky.
VM2: big tech corp spy software IF you need it. (Keep that sucker offline)
(And make backups/snapshots of your installation every once in a while).
If you have it: second machine: this one is for degoogling ect, save your social media stuff here before you take it out back.
If you have it: 3rd machine to run as a personal server (working on that myself)
This can all be old gear. In the process of getting to know Linux better and better (which is an ongoing process for all of us) you’ll get more and more fluent.
You got this! Don’t give up!
Bz1sen
in reply to muxika • • •dontblink
in reply to muxika • • •Tried reaching the support multiple times, I've been completely ignored
hexagonwin
in reply to dontblink • • •dontblink
in reply to hexagonwin • • •After how much time? I was banned because of using third party client, I did the kyc process at the time because I wanted to delete the account but still I could not access...
It's been years for me and they didn't delete it yet.
Buddahriffic
in reply to dontblink • • •hexagonwin
in reply to dontblink • • •melsaskca
in reply to muxika • • •aoude
in reply to melsaskca • • •I have a quest 3 but I'm not paying meta a dime for anything beyond the headset. It's much cheaper to buy games on Steam if that setup works for you. There are also apps like apprenticeVR that basically let you download and install any APK for games to play then directly on the headset.
Recently apprenticeVR gave me some issues reaching the servers, but it looks like there are some forks made recently to provide a fix until the main project incorporates something:
github.com/jimzrt/apprenticeVr…
VRP Mirror Down!
lucapecora (GitHub)krolden
in reply to muxika • • •Tottakai
in reply to krolden • • •krolden
in reply to Tottakai • • •aev_software
in reply to muxika • • •stressballs
in reply to muxika • • •MonkderVierte
in reply to stressballs • • •stressballs
in reply to MonkderVierte • • •MonkderVierte
in reply to stressballs • • •NewOldGuard
in reply to stressballs • • •Kristell
in reply to stressballs • • •muxika
in reply to stressballs • • •ARANDOMTURKISHGUY
in reply to muxika • • •muxika
in reply to ARANDOMTURKISHGUY • • •I was using Nextcloud with OnlyOffice for a while, but since then, this is the setup:
ARANDOMTURKISHGUY
in reply to muxika • • •Atlusb
in reply to muxika • • •Obligatory joke that feels too real:
the onion google opt out village
- YouTube
youtu.beKristell
in reply to Atlusb • • •muxika
in reply to Kristell • • •muxika
in reply to Atlusb • • •ZC3rr0r
in reply to muxika • • •This would be me if only there was some way to easily determine where I have used my @gmail address in the past 20 years. I have already set up another address that I own myself and have moved a bunch of stuff over, but I don't want to lose access to the rest of my accounts tied to my Gmail address.
Although I suppose I could go through my Keepass and list all logins that use my gmail, then chip away at that....
/home/pineapplelover
in reply to ZC3rr0r • • •ZC3rr0r
in reply to /home/pineapplelover • • •I suppose it's a good backstop though, thanks for the tip
muxika
in reply to ZC3rr0r • • •Rooster326
in reply to ZC3rr0r • • •You can setup a rule in Gmail, and tag them when they get to your new inbox. Use Gmail to add a junk CC, or something if the new provider doesn't have strong automation capabilities.
Then use the tags to go back and change the email on file (if necessary).
After a year if they haven't contacted you then they obviously aren't that important.
I found a lot of emails but I didn't find a lot of emails I cared about enough to update when I did this.
ZC3rr0r
in reply to Rooster326 • • •This is a great idea.
I'm using Thunderbird with IMAP to my own email server for my new email, but I can totally see something like that working to make the transition work. Thanks!
/home/pineapplelover
in reply to muxika • • •The other day I tried making a google account for an assignment my prof wanted (bro wanted presentation to be specifically on google slides and video uploaded on youtube). Google now required you to have a physical smartphone to make an account, you have to press a button that sends some kind of api that sends google an sms from your phone.
So I just told my friend to upload it for me
muxika
in reply to /home/pineapplelover • • •/home/pineapplelover
in reply to muxika • • •muxika
in reply to /home/pineapplelover • • •/home/pineapplelover
in reply to muxika • • •krolden
in reply to /home/pineapplelover • • •PortableDoughnut
in reply to muxika • • •EaterOfLentils
in reply to muxika • • •Zerush
in reply to muxika • • •hakunawazo
in reply to Zerush • • •( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
Zerush
in reply to hakunawazo • • •Your private and anonymous search engine Swisscows
swisscows.comratatouille
in reply to muxika • • •