A #p2p future for the web is the radical idea that its bad to put all data in a single place owned by 3 companies and rented by a few hundred. The internet wasnt a mistake, the cloud was a mistake. Platforms were a mistake. A mistake where its not only possible but routine for "everyone's health data" to get stolen. https://infosec.exchange/@patrickcmiller/112341111375581551

I need to share my health data with like 3 people that arent me. Why on earth is that data in the same pile as literally everyone else's.

Patrick C Miller :donor: (@[email protected])

UnitedHealth admits IT security breach could 'cover substantial proportion of people in America' https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/04/23/unitedhealth_admits_breach_substantial/

Infosec Exchange

@jonny companies are allergic to capital expenditures, and selling off your servers in exchange for a monthly fee can really make a quarter pop.

"We own nothing, we're so nimble. All we do is rent factories in China with guaranteed outputs. We're basically like any other incestment firm but we have a very special list of customers/suppliers and maybe some intellectual property, which is very real. Invest in us! Who needs a moat?"

@cykonot
Exactly. An internet for the people wont come from companies