It takes me half an hour of Googling and three passes through settings to turn off things that are harassing my mom, who is extremely diligent about not auto-clicking "agree" on anything to begin with. Every update brings more of this crap to find and turn off.
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I work in... well, let's say I tweet actively in the field of privacy, and if I devote a chunk of time to it and do a lot of research, I am able to set up my devices to work in a reasonably private mode. But this requires a lot of gardening and some self-discipline to maintain.
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It's a crazy state of affairs. We don't have public health biologists teaching their families to do food assays during the holidays so they can avoid strychnine poisoning and botulism from canned foods. We have sane regulations and strict penalties for infringing them.
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that sounds no GDPR compliant. I would advise to find a EU resident and refer them to the local DPA :D
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Why not just block the sender?
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It's the New York Times, maybe she'll want to get emailed an article or something in the future. I try not to break things even more for her than I have to.
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Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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The NYT also requires a 20 minute phone call to cancel a *paid* crossword subscription (and there is no other way to have a non auto renewing subscription). (Can't imagine what cancelling a paper sub is like.)
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