512
An Apple fan says they lost '20 years of digital life' after using an Apple gift card
(www.techradar.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
How many cases like this aren't making the news? There are probably thousands of people who depend on Apple or Google or Dropbox and are suddenly locked out with no options.
I personally know somebody whose online Microsoft account got banned with no explanation.
I've seen a handful of stories about Apple and Google locking people out of their entire digital lives. I think the reason people seem not to care is that most people don't have the mental bandwidth to go against the grain and move their entire lives off of Apple and Google services, especially when they bought into these devices with the hope of making their lives easier.
Truly, most people don't realize how dependent they are on megacorps. I've been finding that out repeatedly over the last year. I thought I was good because I don't pay for streaming services, buy video games, or order Amazon delivery... then I took inventory and realized how much I actually relied on YouTube, Twitch, Google Drive, and GitHub.
I also think it's hard to imagine that something that bad would happen to someone if they didn't really do something wrong. It seems like an online death penalty punishment, and you'd think that for that they'd really have to have proof that you were doing something horrible. It's hard to believe that they just make mistakes, and that having a human being review these cases costs them a few dollars, so they just let people's lives get ruined to increase their profits by 0.000001%
Indeed. No one ever thinks that something like this would happen to them, until it does.
This article needs to be shared and reshared as much as possible so people understand the dangers of putting your faith in a large corporation like that.
I have managed to get to locked out of my own Nextcloud. It was encrypted, and I didn't know that I had to keep a backup of the keys in its config files. I only had a RAID1 for the user data.
You do this once, but again when the pain wears off. Then encrypted back up keys stored in multiple locations becomes a religion.
Oh man, my Dropbox situation was so fucked... unintentionally deleted directories, the Dropbox sync kicked in! Needless to say, never again did I trust a Cloud service. At least not in the way to be 100% dependent on it.