Just sell it online and be honest when asked. Gifting culture is too guilt based, just do the sensible thing and plow through that ridiculous social barrier like a bulldozer.
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Yeah. I already informed them I don't feel comfortable with it in the house. But I'm also the type to use TOR on all my devices. So I don't know how paranoid that came off as.
I think I am going to try to trace down where they got it from. I'm thinking Walmart so, they may take it without a receipt I hope.
Best to sell it. Since you use Tor youβre probably already on a watchlist
Iβve heard this a lot - is it just a common joke in privacy circles, or is anyone using Tor/Tails actually likely to be on a list?
Its pretty likely to be the case, using tor makes you stand out significantly.
I donβt really know what Iβm talking about tbh, but my understanding is the more unique you make yourself, the easier you are to identify. For example, as soon as you use an ad blocker, your browser fingerprint becomes more unique because your average person doesnβt use an ad blocker. Even fewer people use Tor. So if someone knows you are using Tor, then they know you are 1 of maybe 100,000 people instead of millions (idk if those numbers are accurate, but you get the point).
That being said, Tor does do a pretty good job of making you blend into all the other Tor users.
But what I was talking about initially was mostly your ISP identifying your Tor traffic. So you use a VPN, but again you are now more unique than someone not using a VPN, even if your traffic is more encrypted.
How so?
The Snowden leaks revealed that simply subscribing to Linux Journal was enough to put you in a list for enhanced monitoring.
Well. Shit
Didn't you know? Only criminals use Tor! \s
I just prefer it to not get pre-aggrigated results.
The thing with gifts is to thank them for their intent, even if you tell them why you're not going to keep the item.
If you don't succeed in returning it, you might also consider giving it to someone with a movement disability, for whom the assistance might outweigh the privacy issue.
They are fantastic for the disabled. Everyone I know whonis disabled has the Amazon ones for some reason.
There is a stereo microphone and a camera in that thing. What good would Tor do in that case? That data would still make its way to google, unless you can root the whole thing and put a custom OS on it.
I'm not running TOR on the nest. That would be dumb. I'm mentioning this is coming from a whole other end of technology. I like privacy. Google is not very private.
oh ok i thought you were considering tunneling that things traffic through tor somehow
No, because the data would still need to find a way to google services
They have microphones. They don't have cameras.
Oh i thought it did the motion recognition with a camera, but it actually uses a type of radar.
I don't know if that's better or worse
Give it (or sell it) to a person with disabilities. I have a disorder where my joints dislocate constantly, and if it wasn't for my service dog, I would be screwed. The ability of these things to call 911 or other family members is awesome and can be life saving. I've even read about a woman who collapsed down the stairs and turned music up to wake up their partner. Gotta do what you've gotta do.
Is there any other use for these things? I don't understand the point of owing one, when I already have a phone and a TV running Android. What can these things do that my other devices can't?
My grandma loves hers and screams commands at it all day. She has hers hooked up to her lights, to her plant watering thing, it plays music she wants, remembers stuff for her, sets timers and alarms. The fact that she can just talk at it and tell it what to do, instead of using her hands, figuring out apps, and getting up (she's almost 80), makes it pretty beneficial for her.
Though she gets angry when it can't decipher what she wants, so I joke to her, that if/when society gets conquered by AI overlords in the future, they'll probably punish her for abusing and enslaving their ancestors. π
But again, a phone can already do all of that.
That disorder sounds awful. I've dislocated my shoulder fourteen times but no other joints and not for a long time, but that was bad enough and is still impacting me even though it's been a while.
I'm sorry you have to suffer through that.
Looks like it's technically possible to replace the OS, if you wanted to explore that option https://fredericb.info/2022/06/breaking-secure-boot-on-google-nest-hub-2nd-gen-to-run-ubuntu.html
It might* be worth trying this and installing home assistant.
*I say might because I just got some IoT stuff on sale and installed home assistant before realising there's nothing useful in home automation except zoned heating. Fun to play with though, I guess.
Google owns Nest. Personally, I donβt use Google products due to their incredibly invasive ToS.
Thatβs what OP already said in the text of their question.
Just return it. I'm sure they'll understand. And it's the thought that matters.
Do they live with you? If not, I guess just sell it.
If yes, you're probably as screwed as me.
Tell it to shut the fuck up (it works, that's why my grandfather likes it)
Idk what input the device has but you may block it via your router and use it as a speaker
I don't even trust that. Google devices hard-code DNS and IPs and... I have no evidence or knowledge of it, but I assume that they have some Sidewalk-like ability to communicate directly to other Google devices to get outside the network you want them to be on.
We keep ours on a window sill behind a curtain. We have to yell at it 3 times to make it work, but it's still better than looking under the couch for the tv remote.
I don't have a TV. That's why the nest thing is so odd. It does seem like it would bw fun to tinker around with.
It's handy - turn on/off lights, adjust thermostat, set reminders (like to remember cat medicine) or cooking timers. We had the Google one but switched to the Alexa one So i could 'drop in' on my mom and set it to call me if she said HELP.