It’s easy to see why Mozilla wants to do this - people value their own privacy, but it often seems difficult for people to see the link between “in-person” privacy and services like Facebook, or technical solutions like encryption.
I feel like this video makes a pretty good counterpoint to the old “I don’t care about privacy because I’ve got nothing to hide” argument, but it remains to be seen whether future videos will adequately explain the privacy implications of, say, cloud computing or legally-mandated encryption backdoors.
It’s easy to see why Mozilla wants to do this - people value their own privacy, but it often seems difficult for people to see the link between “in-person” privacy and services like Facebook, or technical solutions like encryption.
I feel like this video makes a pretty good counterpoint to the old “I don’t care about privacy because I’ve got nothing to hide” argument, but it remains to be seen whether future videos will adequately explain the privacy implications of, say, cloud computing or legally-mandated encryption backdoors.