Of course there's an enterprise plan for the Feds and AI trainers
Internet-scraping outfit Spy.pet claims to have harvested more than four billion public messages made by nearly 620 million users on more than 14,000 Discord chat servers – and is selling access to this trove.
The website presents the data it's collected in several ways. Each known user has a profile, which contains all known aliases, pronouns, connected accounts to other platforms such as Steam and GitHub, Discord servers joined, and public messages. If you wanted to quite literally spy on a Discord user or users, Spy.pet lets you do that, for a fee.
Always the case with public information, everything is scraped. Anyone can join a public discord server, so anyone can see every message posted there. The real crime is the lack of encryption in private messages.
I use it for professional and personal things. Friends, family, official forms like for work, etc. and it's 5 characters, readable, no numbers. I could legit sell it for >$1000 and it doesn't get any spam beyond shit from my CC offering me deals and other stuff that makes a tangible amount of sense to be on my main email.
But like, not my Lemmy or former reddit account(s), or Facebook (yes family, etc)...
I even have low value Gmail accts that I use for like... Testing scams or something.
Updated Internet-scraping outfit Spy.pet claims to have harvested more than four billion public messages made by nearly 620 million users on more than 14,000 Discord chat servers – and is selling access to this trove.
Yes, all the info is already public in a way – Discord is kinda like IRC on steroids – and it's a reminder that it's not impossible to gather up all this chatter using bots for various purposes (if not surveillance then training AI models.)
Each known user has a profile, which contains all known aliases, pronouns, connected accounts to other platforms such as Steam and GitHub, Discord servers joined, and public messages.
As a side note, the footer of Spy.pet has some interesting content, such as a link to a video of TempleOS developer Terry Davis dancing, a "Transparency" page that just says the word "transparency," and a link to the "Request Removal" page that actually just plays the meme clip of newspaper editor J. Jonah Jameson laughing at Peter Parker in the 2004 movie Spider-Man 2.
Speaking of which, Spy.pet has a potentially interesting interpretation of the European Union's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), as pointed out by the Stack Diary blog this week.
The US FTC also doesn't take the harvesting and selling of children's data lightly, as it just opened a lawsuit against Meta in November on this topic.
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