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#1 Post-Snowden the general public has demonstrated they don't really care about privacy. As long as that is true, both companies and governments can demand a lot and get it, even though they don't need it.

Strictly from a computing standpoint (I can't address healthcare providers etc.), the root of many of these problems are at the consumer OS level and the incentives for the companies which build them.

We have three big problems: Google, Apple, and Microsoft. The incentives for these three are misaligned from having secure multi-device computing.

Amazon is as bad or worse, just look at the issues they've had with employees accessing Alexa audio recordings along with their security camera stuff. Fortunately their phone flopped.

Out of the big three, Google has been the worst offender here for the last 10 or so years. Apple has been pretty good, especially with actually security the hardware and stomping out 0days, but watch out: advertising is their growth business. Microsoft has a long history that isn't trustworthy.

Post-GPT3.5+, privacy matters a whole lot. The difference between people who will get completely p0wned and those that don't will be how much public and accessible data is out there. This will have a perverse feedback loop of companies demanding even more personal data and proprietary verification hardware.



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