• I Spoke With Some of the Most Private People Online, and Here's What They Sacrifice

    How far would you go to keep yourself private online? There’s little doubt that advances in technology over the past three decades have eroded traditional concepts around privacy and security: It was once unthinkable to voluntarily invite big companies to track your every move and decision—now, we happily let them in exchange for the digital goods and services we rely on. Most people these days either tolerate these privacy intrusions or outright don’t care about them. But there’s a growing movement that believes it’s time to claim our privacy back. Some are working piecemeal, blocking trackers and reducing permissions where they can, while not totally ditching modern digital society as a whole. Others, however, are as hardcore as can be—a modern equivalent of "going off the grid."  We put out a call looking for the latter—people who are going to great lengths to protect their privacy in today’s mass surveillance world. We received a number of insightful, fascinating, and unique situations, but for this piece, I want to highlight four specific perspectives: "Ed," "Jane," "Mark," and "Jay."Ed is "ruthless" with app choices and permissionsThe first respondent, I’ll call Ed, since their privacy journey began with the Edward Snowden leaks: “I'd known something was likely up…as early as 2006I remember headlines about AT&T possibly spying, but high school me didn't take it too seriously at the time. The Snowden leaks, when I was in college, really opened my eyes. Ever since, I've taken steps to protect my privacy.”Ed says the biggest step they’ve taken towards a digitally private life has been their Proton account. If you’re not aware, Proton is a company that offers apps designed for privacy. Their email service, Proton Mail, is the most famous of the company’s products, but Proton makes other apps as well. Ed uses many of them, including Proton VPN, Proton Calendar, and Proton Drive. Ed pays for Proton Ultimate, which costs them nearly every two years. You don’t have to pay for Proton, but your experience is much more limited. That’s not totally dissimilar to Google’s offers, which gives you more features if you pay, but most people can definitely get by with a free Google Account. I'm not so sure the reverse is true. Speaking of Google, Ed does have a Google Account, but rarely logs into it. They don’t keep anything attached to it, however—Ed stores all files, for example, in Proton Drive or Tresoirt.Ed uses SimpleLogin for throwaway email addresses. That’s not just for the times Ed wants to avoid giving their email address to someone. According to them, they use an alias anytime an organization asks for their email, and frequently delete it when it’s no longer useful. Each online purchase gets its own alias, and that alias is deleted once the purchase is complete. Whenever Ed travels, they use an alias for any flights, hotels, and rental cars they use. Once the trip is up, they delete the alias. If one of those aliases receives a spam message, they delete it as well.Ed’s smartphone of choice is iPhone, and although Apple arguably has the best reputation for privacy in big tech, Ed is no fan: “Apple is no bastion of privacy of course, but they seem to be the least-worst of the big tech companies.” Ed doesn’t use iCloud for any backups: Any iPhone files are kept in Tresorit. That iPhone, of course, contains apps. But each app is there for a reason, and no app gets access to permissions unless it requires it: “I'm ruthless about apps and app permissions. If I'm not going to use the app regularly, I uninstall it. I grant only those permissions I think the app reasonably needs.” Ed protects his mobile internet traffic with Proton VPN, and only accesses the web via Firefox Focus, a special version of Firefox designed for privacy. Location services are always off on Ed’s iPhone, unless they’re using Apple Maps for navigation. Once they arrive at their destination, Ed disables location services again. They also have an interesting trick for getting back home without revealing their actual address:  “Additionally, when I'm navigating home, I don't enter my home address. I enter the address down the street just as an extra layer so I'm not entering my actual home address…I'll end navigation and turn off location while still driving…if I know the rest of the way home myself."Most of us deal regularlywith spam calls. Not Ed: They use the “Silence Unknown Callers” setting on iOS to send all numbers not in the Contacts app to voicemail. They then review all voicemails, and if they didn’t leave a message, they block the number. Our initial call out for this piece referenced how using a VPN can sometimes block incoming phone calls, but Ed isn’t bothered by that: “Since most calls these days are scams or telemarketing, and most people I do want to talk to aren't going to call me anyway, I see this as more of a feature than a bug.” For their desktop computing needs, Ed uses Windows. They admit they aren’t privacy experts when it comes to Microsoft’s OS, but they do what they can, including changing all privacy settings and uninstalling all programs they don’t use.They also run a clean version of Windows 11 after following Lifehacker’s guide. Firefox is their go-to PC browser, and they use a variety of extensions, including:ClearURLs: removes trackers from links.Decentraleyes: blocks data requests from third-party networks. Disconnect: blocks trackers from "thousands" of third-party sites.Firefox Multi-Account Containers: separates your browsing into siloed "containers" to isolate each session from one another.PopUpOFF: blocks pop-ups, overlays, and cookie alerts.Privacy Badger: blocks invisible trackers.Proton VPN: Proton's Firefox add-on for its VPN.uBlock Origin: popular content blocker.Ed didn’t say how much of an impact this array of extensions and settings has on their browsing, save for YouTube, which they admit does sometimes give them trouble. However, Ed has workarounds: “When YouTube wants me to 'sign in to confirm you're not a bot,' changing VPN servers usually does the trick.” Ed also uses the audible clues for ReCAPTCHA prompts, rather than the pictures, since they don’t want to help train Google’s “braindead AI.”Ed deleted all their social media accounts, including Facebook, X, Instagram, and LinkedIn. Though they’ve never had TikTok installed on their phone, they will watch it in Firefox when a friend sends them a video. Jane uses an open-source smartphone OS designed for privacyWhile Edward Snowden may have kicked off Ed’s interest in personal privacy, "Jane" has many strong beliefs motivating their desire for privacy. They are concerned about data brokers and Meta’s practices of tracking internet activity, and how these companies build profiles based on that data to sell to third-parties; they’re concerned about the possibility of telecommunication companies tracking our locations via cellular towers; they worry about US law enforcement and agencies reviewing citizens’ social media accounts accounts and tracking people. Their focus on privacy is fueled by true concern for their own well-being, not only the value of privacy as a concept.      Jane uses a VPN on all of their devices. Instead of Proton, however, Jane opts for Mullvad. They enable ad and tracker blocking, as well as a kill switch, which blocks your internet if you lose connection with the VPN—thus protecting your connection from being leaked out of the secure network.I’m a big advocate for strong and unique passwords and proper password management, but Jane definitely beats me when it comes to secure credentials. Jane uses six to eight-word passphrases generated by diceware, a tactic that chooses words based on dice rolls. Something like this diceware generator will roll a die five times, then find a word in a bank based on that five-digit number. You can repeat this as many times as you want to come up with a passphrase built up with random words. Jane saves all of their passphrases to a password manager, except for the ones for important accounts, like their bank. They commit those to memory, just in case someone breaches their password manager.     Like Ed, Jane uses Mullvad, but instead of just using their VPN, they opt for the web browser, which has those protections built in. Mullvad’s strict privacy settings break persistent logins on websites, so any sites Jane wants to stay logged in on are kept in Brave browser. For both Mullvad and Brave, Jane uses uBlock Origin.“From time-to-time I do run into sites that will block access due to being on a VPN or blocking ads and trackers. Instead of disablingVPN completely, switching my connection to one of Mullvad's rented servers instead of ones they own usually helps. Barring that, I occasionally go intoand temporarily whitelist a needed. This works for me to get around site blocks most of the time.”  Jane uses a Mac, and configured macOS based on various privacy guides. But instead of an iPhone, Jane opts for a Google Pixel. That might surprise readers who assumed hardcore privacy enthusiasts would break away from Google entirely. But X doesn’t run Android: Instead, they installed GrapheneOS on their Pixel, an open-source OS designed for privacy. Following a restart, Jane configured the Pixel to only unlock with a seven-word dice passphrase—for general use, they use a fingerprint scan and a six-digit PIN. If the don’t unlock their Pixel for a while, their phone automatically reboots to put it back into this “First Unlock” state. They also keep airplane mode on at all times to disable the phone’s radio communications, but maintain a wifi connection with timed automatic Bluetooth and wireless disabling. Jane also deleted all their social media accounts after downloading all data associated with those platforms.Mark uses phone and credit card masks“Mark” is perhaps the least hardcore of the respondents in this story, but that makes their experience both interesting and relatable. Unlike most of the people we spoke to, Mark is still on Facebook and Instagram. That’s due to their job, which requires them to be on the platform, but they’ve been “systematically” deleting everything they can over their 19-year Facebook history and saving the data to an external hard drive. Mark doesn’t follow anything that isn’t relevant to their job, and only uses Facebook and Instagram inside the DuckDuckGo browser. They don’t react to posts they see, and following their privacy tactics, Facebook doesn’t show them relevant ads anymore. “If there is an ad I'm actually interested in I'll search it up in a different browser rather than click it.”Mark has had four Google Accounts in their time online, and has deleted two so far. Like Facebook, they have to use Google for their job, but they delegate all their work to Chrome. All other browsing runs through Firefox, DuckDuckGo, or Tor. The latter is perhaps best known for being the browser of choice for browsing the dark web, but what makes it great for that is also what makes it a great choice for private browsing.Unlike others in this story, Mark hasn’t de-Googled themselves completely. In addition to using Chrome for work, Mark has a phone mask through Google, and has their contacts, calendar, and maps tied to the company—though they are moving away from Google as much as they can. They've been running through their old emails to find and delete outdated accounts they no longer use. Any accounts they do need now use an email mask that forwards to a Mailfence account, an encrypted email service.   Mark was the only respondent to talk about entertainment in relation to privacy: “I've also been switching to physical media over streaming, so buying CDs and DVDs, locally as much as possible. I'm lucky to have a local music store and a local bookstore...one of the owners of our bookstore wrote a book on how to resist Amazon and why. Any book I want, I can either order through them or on Alibris. For music, I use our local record store and Discogs.”When shopping online, Mark uses a credit card mask, but still uses the card itself when shopping in person. They want to start using a credit card mask in retail locations like Janet Vertesi, an associate professor of sociology at Princeton University, but they haven’t quite gotten there yet.   What really piqued my interest most about Mark, however, wasn’t their perspective on their own privacy concerns, but the concerns around the privacy of their kids: “They each have a Gmail, two of them have Snapchat. Their schools use Gaggle and Google to spy on them. I don't even know how to start disconnecting them from all this...I was a kid during the wild west of the internet and this feels like getting back to my roots. My kids are end users who understand apps and touchscreens, not torrenting their music or coding a basic website.I feel like Big Data has its grip on the kids already and I don't have a guidebook on navigating that as a parent.”  Mark’s current focus on their kids’ privacy includes deleting their health data from their local health system. That’s in part due to a data breach impacting the health system, but also the language about autism from Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the current Secretary of Health and Human Services.Jay de-googled their life and uses a VoIP phone number"Jay's" origin story with personal privacy dates back to 2017. That year, Equifax suffered a major hack, where nearly 148 million Americans had sensitive data stolen and weren’t notified about the breach for months. Jay was frustrated: You don’t choose to give your data to Equifax, or any credit bureau, and yet so many people lost their data. They also felt that companies were not properly held responsible for these events, and lawmakers were simply too out of touch to do what was necessary to protect citizens’ privacy, so they took it upon themselves to protect their own data. Ever since this incident, Jay freezes their credit: “It was frustratingly difficult back then, but nowadays, it is very easy...The freeze will not allow anyone to pull credit for large purchases in your name, even if they have your social security number. I decided I wanted to pursue some privacy for the things I do have a choice over.”  From here, Jay de-googled their life, including both Google Search as well as YouTube. They’ve found no issue with using alternative search engines, and, in fact, sees Google getting worse, as it tries to show you results based on what it thinks it knows about you, not what is most relevant to your actual query: “The internet was supposed to be a place you went to find information, not where you became the information that companies take instead."Jay uses tools to prevent fingerprinting, where companies identify you and track you across the internet, but worries that going too far with things like ad blockers puts a target on your back as well. Jay chooses to pick “a couple of effective tools,” and runs with those.For their smartphone needs, Jay goes with Apple. Like Ed, Jay doesn’t believe Apple is perfect, and even considers their privacy policies a bit of a gimmick, but sees them as the better alternative to Android. Jay likes the security of the App Store, and the array of privacy features in both Safari and Apple Accounts as a whole. They highlight Safari’s “Advanced Tracking and Fingerprinting Protection” feature, which helps block trackers as you browse the web; iCloud’s Private Relay, which hides your IP address; and “Hide My Email,” which generates email aliases you can share with others without giving your true email address away.Most of us are plagued with spam calls, but following the Robinhood data breach in 2021, Jay started receiving a flood of them. They decided to change their phone number and made a point of never sharing it with businesses. For the times they need to give out their number to parties they don’t trust, they use a number generated by My Sudo, which, for per year, gives them a VoIPphone number. It works with most services that rely on SMS, but it won’t function for two-factor authentication.My Sudo lets you change your number for an additional so if Jay’s number ever was compromised or started receiving too much spam, they could swap it.        Jay, like many respondents, deleted all social media services: “It has its place in society for a lot of people, and is no doubt a great way to connect. However, I found that the fear of deleting it was a lot worse than actually deleting it. The people you care about won’t forget you exist.” That said, Jay doesn't mind any of the obstacles this lifestyle does throw their way: “It is a challenging topic, as most people consider you a little bit 'out there' if you take steps to make your life a little less convenient, but more private. The modern world sells you convenience, while pretending it is free, and harvesting your data for so much more than you actually get out of your relationship to them.”      What it takes to be private on the modern internetThere's no one way to tackle personal privacy. Every one of the respondents to our query had something unique about their approach, and many had different motivations behind why they were so concerned about their privacy.There are plenty of common through lines, of course. Most privacy people love Proton, which makes sense. Proton seems to be the only company that offers a suite of apps most closely resembling Google's while also prioritizing privacy. If you want your email, calendar, word processor, and even your VPN all tied up nicely under one privacy-focused umbrella, that's Proton. But not everyone wants an ecosystem, either. That's why you see respondents using other VPNs, like Mullvad, or other private storage options, like Tresorit. These apps and services exist—they might just not be owned by one company, like Apple or Google.Google and Meta are more commonalities, in that most privacy enthusiasts ditch them entirely. Some, like Mark, haven't been able to fully shake off these data-hungry companies. In Mark's case, that's because they need these platforms for work. But while most hardcore privacy people delete their Google and Meta accounts, most of us have trouble de-Googling and de-Metaing our digital lives. In general, though, the keys to privacy success include the following: Use a VPN to protect your internet traffic; prioritize privacy in your web browser, both through the browser itself, as well as extensions that block ads and protect your traffic; shield your sensitive information whenever possible, by using email aliases, alternate phone numbers, or credit card masks; use strong and unique passwords for all accounts, and store those passwords in a secure password manager; use two-factor authentication whenever possible; and stick to end-to-end encrypted chat apps to communicate with others. While there's always more you can do, that's the perfect storm to keep your digital life as private as reasonably possible. Some might read through the examples here and see steps that are too much effort to be worth it. It might seem out of reach to ditch Gmail and Instagram, break certain websites, and force your friends and family to learn new numbers and email addresses to protect your privacy, especially if you don't feel your privacy has that much of an impact on your life. But even if you aren't sold on the concept of privacy itself, there are real-world results from sticking with these methods. Jay no longer receives spam calls and texts; Mark no longer sees ads that are freakishly relevant to their likes. It's a lifestyle change, to be sure, but it's not just to serve some concept of privacy. You can see results by changing the way you interact with the internet, all without having to actually disconnect from the internet, and, by extension, the world at large.
    #spoke #with #some #most #private
    I Spoke With Some of the Most Private People Online, and Here's What They Sacrifice
    How far would you go to keep yourself private online? There’s little doubt that advances in technology over the past three decades have eroded traditional concepts around privacy and security: It was once unthinkable to voluntarily invite big companies to track your every move and decision—now, we happily let them in exchange for the digital goods and services we rely on. Most people these days either tolerate these privacy intrusions or outright don’t care about them. But there’s a growing movement that believes it’s time to claim our privacy back. Some are working piecemeal, blocking trackers and reducing permissions where they can, while not totally ditching modern digital society as a whole. Others, however, are as hardcore as can be—a modern equivalent of "going off the grid."  We put out a call looking for the latter—people who are going to great lengths to protect their privacy in today’s mass surveillance world. We received a number of insightful, fascinating, and unique situations, but for this piece, I want to highlight four specific perspectives: "Ed," "Jane," "Mark," and "Jay."Ed is "ruthless" with app choices and permissionsThe first respondent, I’ll call Ed, since their privacy journey began with the Edward Snowden leaks: “I'd known something was likely up…as early as 2006I remember headlines about AT&T possibly spying, but high school me didn't take it too seriously at the time. The Snowden leaks, when I was in college, really opened my eyes. Ever since, I've taken steps to protect my privacy.”Ed says the biggest step they’ve taken towards a digitally private life has been their Proton account. If you’re not aware, Proton is a company that offers apps designed for privacy. Their email service, Proton Mail, is the most famous of the company’s products, but Proton makes other apps as well. Ed uses many of them, including Proton VPN, Proton Calendar, and Proton Drive. Ed pays for Proton Ultimate, which costs them nearly every two years. You don’t have to pay for Proton, but your experience is much more limited. That’s not totally dissimilar to Google’s offers, which gives you more features if you pay, but most people can definitely get by with a free Google Account. I'm not so sure the reverse is true. Speaking of Google, Ed does have a Google Account, but rarely logs into it. They don’t keep anything attached to it, however—Ed stores all files, for example, in Proton Drive or Tresoirt.Ed uses SimpleLogin for throwaway email addresses. That’s not just for the times Ed wants to avoid giving their email address to someone. According to them, they use an alias anytime an organization asks for their email, and frequently delete it when it’s no longer useful. Each online purchase gets its own alias, and that alias is deleted once the purchase is complete. Whenever Ed travels, they use an alias for any flights, hotels, and rental cars they use. Once the trip is up, they delete the alias. If one of those aliases receives a spam message, they delete it as well.Ed’s smartphone of choice is iPhone, and although Apple arguably has the best reputation for privacy in big tech, Ed is no fan: “Apple is no bastion of privacy of course, but they seem to be the least-worst of the big tech companies.” Ed doesn’t use iCloud for any backups: Any iPhone files are kept in Tresorit. That iPhone, of course, contains apps. But each app is there for a reason, and no app gets access to permissions unless it requires it: “I'm ruthless about apps and app permissions. If I'm not going to use the app regularly, I uninstall it. I grant only those permissions I think the app reasonably needs.” Ed protects his mobile internet traffic with Proton VPN, and only accesses the web via Firefox Focus, a special version of Firefox designed for privacy. Location services are always off on Ed’s iPhone, unless they’re using Apple Maps for navigation. Once they arrive at their destination, Ed disables location services again. They also have an interesting trick for getting back home without revealing their actual address:  “Additionally, when I'm navigating home, I don't enter my home address. I enter the address down the street just as an extra layer so I'm not entering my actual home address…I'll end navigation and turn off location while still driving…if I know the rest of the way home myself."Most of us deal regularlywith spam calls. Not Ed: They use the “Silence Unknown Callers” setting on iOS to send all numbers not in the Contacts app to voicemail. They then review all voicemails, and if they didn’t leave a message, they block the number. Our initial call out for this piece referenced how using a VPN can sometimes block incoming phone calls, but Ed isn’t bothered by that: “Since most calls these days are scams or telemarketing, and most people I do want to talk to aren't going to call me anyway, I see this as more of a feature than a bug.” For their desktop computing needs, Ed uses Windows. They admit they aren’t privacy experts when it comes to Microsoft’s OS, but they do what they can, including changing all privacy settings and uninstalling all programs they don’t use.They also run a clean version of Windows 11 after following Lifehacker’s guide. Firefox is their go-to PC browser, and they use a variety of extensions, including:ClearURLs: removes trackers from links.Decentraleyes: blocks data requests from third-party networks. Disconnect: blocks trackers from "thousands" of third-party sites.Firefox Multi-Account Containers: separates your browsing into siloed "containers" to isolate each session from one another.PopUpOFF: blocks pop-ups, overlays, and cookie alerts.Privacy Badger: blocks invisible trackers.Proton VPN: Proton's Firefox add-on for its VPN.uBlock Origin: popular content blocker.Ed didn’t say how much of an impact this array of extensions and settings has on their browsing, save for YouTube, which they admit does sometimes give them trouble. However, Ed has workarounds: “When YouTube wants me to 'sign in to confirm you're not a bot,' changing VPN servers usually does the trick.” Ed also uses the audible clues for ReCAPTCHA prompts, rather than the pictures, since they don’t want to help train Google’s “braindead AI.”Ed deleted all their social media accounts, including Facebook, X, Instagram, and LinkedIn. Though they’ve never had TikTok installed on their phone, they will watch it in Firefox when a friend sends them a video. Jane uses an open-source smartphone OS designed for privacyWhile Edward Snowden may have kicked off Ed’s interest in personal privacy, "Jane" has many strong beliefs motivating their desire for privacy. They are concerned about data brokers and Meta’s practices of tracking internet activity, and how these companies build profiles based on that data to sell to third-parties; they’re concerned about the possibility of telecommunication companies tracking our locations via cellular towers; they worry about US law enforcement and agencies reviewing citizens’ social media accounts accounts and tracking people. Their focus on privacy is fueled by true concern for their own well-being, not only the value of privacy as a concept.      Jane uses a VPN on all of their devices. Instead of Proton, however, Jane opts for Mullvad. They enable ad and tracker blocking, as well as a kill switch, which blocks your internet if you lose connection with the VPN—thus protecting your connection from being leaked out of the secure network.I’m a big advocate for strong and unique passwords and proper password management, but Jane definitely beats me when it comes to secure credentials. Jane uses six to eight-word passphrases generated by diceware, a tactic that chooses words based on dice rolls. Something like this diceware generator will roll a die five times, then find a word in a bank based on that five-digit number. You can repeat this as many times as you want to come up with a passphrase built up with random words. Jane saves all of their passphrases to a password manager, except for the ones for important accounts, like their bank. They commit those to memory, just in case someone breaches their password manager.     Like Ed, Jane uses Mullvad, but instead of just using their VPN, they opt for the web browser, which has those protections built in. Mullvad’s strict privacy settings break persistent logins on websites, so any sites Jane wants to stay logged in on are kept in Brave browser. For both Mullvad and Brave, Jane uses uBlock Origin.“From time-to-time I do run into sites that will block access due to being on a VPN or blocking ads and trackers. Instead of disablingVPN completely, switching my connection to one of Mullvad's rented servers instead of ones they own usually helps. Barring that, I occasionally go intoand temporarily whitelist a needed. This works for me to get around site blocks most of the time.”  Jane uses a Mac, and configured macOS based on various privacy guides. But instead of an iPhone, Jane opts for a Google Pixel. That might surprise readers who assumed hardcore privacy enthusiasts would break away from Google entirely. But X doesn’t run Android: Instead, they installed GrapheneOS on their Pixel, an open-source OS designed for privacy. Following a restart, Jane configured the Pixel to only unlock with a seven-word dice passphrase—for general use, they use a fingerprint scan and a six-digit PIN. If the don’t unlock their Pixel for a while, their phone automatically reboots to put it back into this “First Unlock” state. They also keep airplane mode on at all times to disable the phone’s radio communications, but maintain a wifi connection with timed automatic Bluetooth and wireless disabling. Jane also deleted all their social media accounts after downloading all data associated with those platforms.Mark uses phone and credit card masks“Mark” is perhaps the least hardcore of the respondents in this story, but that makes their experience both interesting and relatable. Unlike most of the people we spoke to, Mark is still on Facebook and Instagram. That’s due to their job, which requires them to be on the platform, but they’ve been “systematically” deleting everything they can over their 19-year Facebook history and saving the data to an external hard drive. Mark doesn’t follow anything that isn’t relevant to their job, and only uses Facebook and Instagram inside the DuckDuckGo browser. They don’t react to posts they see, and following their privacy tactics, Facebook doesn’t show them relevant ads anymore. “If there is an ad I'm actually interested in I'll search it up in a different browser rather than click it.”Mark has had four Google Accounts in their time online, and has deleted two so far. Like Facebook, they have to use Google for their job, but they delegate all their work to Chrome. All other browsing runs through Firefox, DuckDuckGo, or Tor. The latter is perhaps best known for being the browser of choice for browsing the dark web, but what makes it great for that is also what makes it a great choice for private browsing.Unlike others in this story, Mark hasn’t de-Googled themselves completely. In addition to using Chrome for work, Mark has a phone mask through Google, and has their contacts, calendar, and maps tied to the company—though they are moving away from Google as much as they can. They've been running through their old emails to find and delete outdated accounts they no longer use. Any accounts they do need now use an email mask that forwards to a Mailfence account, an encrypted email service.   Mark was the only respondent to talk about entertainment in relation to privacy: “I've also been switching to physical media over streaming, so buying CDs and DVDs, locally as much as possible. I'm lucky to have a local music store and a local bookstore...one of the owners of our bookstore wrote a book on how to resist Amazon and why. Any book I want, I can either order through them or on Alibris. For music, I use our local record store and Discogs.”When shopping online, Mark uses a credit card mask, but still uses the card itself when shopping in person. They want to start using a credit card mask in retail locations like Janet Vertesi, an associate professor of sociology at Princeton University, but they haven’t quite gotten there yet.   What really piqued my interest most about Mark, however, wasn’t their perspective on their own privacy concerns, but the concerns around the privacy of their kids: “They each have a Gmail, two of them have Snapchat. Their schools use Gaggle and Google to spy on them. I don't even know how to start disconnecting them from all this...I was a kid during the wild west of the internet and this feels like getting back to my roots. My kids are end users who understand apps and touchscreens, not torrenting their music or coding a basic website.I feel like Big Data has its grip on the kids already and I don't have a guidebook on navigating that as a parent.”  Mark’s current focus on their kids’ privacy includes deleting their health data from their local health system. That’s in part due to a data breach impacting the health system, but also the language about autism from Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the current Secretary of Health and Human Services.Jay de-googled their life and uses a VoIP phone number"Jay's" origin story with personal privacy dates back to 2017. That year, Equifax suffered a major hack, where nearly 148 million Americans had sensitive data stolen and weren’t notified about the breach for months. Jay was frustrated: You don’t choose to give your data to Equifax, or any credit bureau, and yet so many people lost their data. They also felt that companies were not properly held responsible for these events, and lawmakers were simply too out of touch to do what was necessary to protect citizens’ privacy, so they took it upon themselves to protect their own data. Ever since this incident, Jay freezes their credit: “It was frustratingly difficult back then, but nowadays, it is very easy...The freeze will not allow anyone to pull credit for large purchases in your name, even if they have your social security number. I decided I wanted to pursue some privacy for the things I do have a choice over.”  From here, Jay de-googled their life, including both Google Search as well as YouTube. They’ve found no issue with using alternative search engines, and, in fact, sees Google getting worse, as it tries to show you results based on what it thinks it knows about you, not what is most relevant to your actual query: “The internet was supposed to be a place you went to find information, not where you became the information that companies take instead."Jay uses tools to prevent fingerprinting, where companies identify you and track you across the internet, but worries that going too far with things like ad blockers puts a target on your back as well. Jay chooses to pick “a couple of effective tools,” and runs with those.For their smartphone needs, Jay goes with Apple. Like Ed, Jay doesn’t believe Apple is perfect, and even considers their privacy policies a bit of a gimmick, but sees them as the better alternative to Android. Jay likes the security of the App Store, and the array of privacy features in both Safari and Apple Accounts as a whole. They highlight Safari’s “Advanced Tracking and Fingerprinting Protection” feature, which helps block trackers as you browse the web; iCloud’s Private Relay, which hides your IP address; and “Hide My Email,” which generates email aliases you can share with others without giving your true email address away.Most of us are plagued with spam calls, but following the Robinhood data breach in 2021, Jay started receiving a flood of them. They decided to change their phone number and made a point of never sharing it with businesses. For the times they need to give out their number to parties they don’t trust, they use a number generated by My Sudo, which, for per year, gives them a VoIPphone number. It works with most services that rely on SMS, but it won’t function for two-factor authentication.My Sudo lets you change your number for an additional so if Jay’s number ever was compromised or started receiving too much spam, they could swap it.        Jay, like many respondents, deleted all social media services: “It has its place in society for a lot of people, and is no doubt a great way to connect. However, I found that the fear of deleting it was a lot worse than actually deleting it. The people you care about won’t forget you exist.” That said, Jay doesn't mind any of the obstacles this lifestyle does throw their way: “It is a challenging topic, as most people consider you a little bit 'out there' if you take steps to make your life a little less convenient, but more private. The modern world sells you convenience, while pretending it is free, and harvesting your data for so much more than you actually get out of your relationship to them.”      What it takes to be private on the modern internetThere's no one way to tackle personal privacy. Every one of the respondents to our query had something unique about their approach, and many had different motivations behind why they were so concerned about their privacy.There are plenty of common through lines, of course. Most privacy people love Proton, which makes sense. Proton seems to be the only company that offers a suite of apps most closely resembling Google's while also prioritizing privacy. If you want your email, calendar, word processor, and even your VPN all tied up nicely under one privacy-focused umbrella, that's Proton. But not everyone wants an ecosystem, either. That's why you see respondents using other VPNs, like Mullvad, or other private storage options, like Tresorit. These apps and services exist—they might just not be owned by one company, like Apple or Google.Google and Meta are more commonalities, in that most privacy enthusiasts ditch them entirely. Some, like Mark, haven't been able to fully shake off these data-hungry companies. In Mark's case, that's because they need these platforms for work. But while most hardcore privacy people delete their Google and Meta accounts, most of us have trouble de-Googling and de-Metaing our digital lives. In general, though, the keys to privacy success include the following: Use a VPN to protect your internet traffic; prioritize privacy in your web browser, both through the browser itself, as well as extensions that block ads and protect your traffic; shield your sensitive information whenever possible, by using email aliases, alternate phone numbers, or credit card masks; use strong and unique passwords for all accounts, and store those passwords in a secure password manager; use two-factor authentication whenever possible; and stick to end-to-end encrypted chat apps to communicate with others. While there's always more you can do, that's the perfect storm to keep your digital life as private as reasonably possible. Some might read through the examples here and see steps that are too much effort to be worth it. It might seem out of reach to ditch Gmail and Instagram, break certain websites, and force your friends and family to learn new numbers and email addresses to protect your privacy, especially if you don't feel your privacy has that much of an impact on your life. But even if you aren't sold on the concept of privacy itself, there are real-world results from sticking with these methods. Jay no longer receives spam calls and texts; Mark no longer sees ads that are freakishly relevant to their likes. It's a lifestyle change, to be sure, but it's not just to serve some concept of privacy. You can see results by changing the way you interact with the internet, all without having to actually disconnect from the internet, and, by extension, the world at large. #spoke #with #some #most #private
    LIFEHACKER.COM
    I Spoke With Some of the Most Private People Online, and Here's What They Sacrifice
    How far would you go to keep yourself private online? There’s little doubt that advances in technology over the past three decades have eroded traditional concepts around privacy and security: It was once unthinkable to voluntarily invite big companies to track your every move and decision—now, we happily let them in exchange for the digital goods and services we rely on (or are hopelessly addicted to). Most people these days either tolerate these privacy intrusions or outright don’t care about them. But there’s a growing movement that believes it’s time to claim our privacy back. Some are working piecemeal, blocking trackers and reducing permissions where they can, while not totally ditching modern digital society as a whole. Others, however, are as hardcore as can be—a modern equivalent of "going off the grid."  We put out a call looking for the latter—people who are going to great lengths to protect their privacy in today’s mass surveillance world. We received a number of insightful, fascinating, and unique situations, but for this piece, I want to highlight four specific perspectives: "Ed," "Jane," "Mark," and "Jay."Ed is "ruthless" with app choices and permissionsThe first respondent, I’ll call Ed, since their privacy journey began with the Edward Snowden leaks: “I'd known something was likely up…as early as 2006[.] I remember headlines about AT&T possibly spying, but high school me didn't take it too seriously at the time. The Snowden leaks, when I was in college, really opened my eyes. Ever since, I've taken steps to protect my privacy.”Ed says the biggest step they’ve taken towards a digitally private life has been their Proton account. If you’re not aware, Proton is a company that offers apps designed for privacy. Their email service, Proton Mail, is the most famous of the company’s products, but Proton makes other apps as well. Ed uses many of them, including Proton VPN, Proton Calendar, and Proton Drive. Ed pays for Proton Ultimate, which costs them nearly $200 every two years (a new account is now billed yearly at $119.88). You don’t have to pay for Proton, but your experience is much more limited. That’s not totally dissimilar to Google’s offers, which gives you more features if you pay, but most people can definitely get by with a free Google Account. I'm not so sure the reverse is true. Speaking of Google, Ed does have a Google Account, but rarely logs into it. They don’t keep anything attached to it, however—Ed stores all files, for example, in Proton Drive or Tresoirt (another end-to-end encrypted service).Ed uses SimpleLogin for throwaway email addresses. That’s not just for the times Ed wants to avoid giving their email address to someone. According to them, they use an alias anytime an organization asks for their email, and frequently delete it when it’s no longer useful. Each online purchase gets its own alias, and that alias is deleted once the purchase is complete. Whenever Ed travels, they use an alias for any flights, hotels, and rental cars they use. Once the trip is up, they delete the alias. If one of those aliases receives a spam message, they delete it as well.Ed’s smartphone of choice is iPhone, and although Apple arguably has the best reputation for privacy in big tech, Ed is no fan: “Apple is no bastion of privacy of course, but they seem to be the least-worst of the big tech companies.” Ed doesn’t use iCloud for any backups: Any iPhone files are kept in Tresorit. That iPhone, of course, contains apps. But each app is there for a reason, and no app gets access to permissions unless it requires it: “I'm ruthless about apps and app permissions. If I'm not going to use the app regularly, I uninstall it. I grant only those permissions I think the app reasonably needs.” Ed protects his mobile internet traffic with Proton VPN, and only accesses the web via Firefox Focus, a special version of Firefox designed for privacy. Location services are always off on Ed’s iPhone, unless they’re using Apple Maps for navigation. Once they arrive at their destination, Ed disables location services again. They also have an interesting trick for getting back home without revealing their actual address:  “Additionally, when I'm navigating home, I don't enter my home address. I enter the address down the street just as an extra layer so I'm not entering my actual home address…I'll end navigation and turn off location while still driving…if I know the rest of the way home myself."Most of us deal regularly (if not daily) with spam calls. Not Ed: They use the “Silence Unknown Callers” setting on iOS to send all numbers not in the Contacts app to voicemail. They then review all voicemails, and if they didn’t leave a message, they block the number. Our initial call out for this piece referenced how using a VPN can sometimes block incoming phone calls, but Ed isn’t bothered by that: “Since most calls these days are scams or telemarketing, and most people I do want to talk to aren't going to call me anyway, I see this as more of a feature than a bug.” For their desktop computing needs, Ed uses Windows. They admit they aren’t privacy experts when it comes to Microsoft’s OS, but they do what they can, including changing all privacy settings and uninstalling all programs they don’t use. (That includes OneDrive and Edge.) They also run a clean version of Windows 11 after following Lifehacker’s guide. Firefox is their go-to PC browser, and they use a variety of extensions, including:ClearURLs: removes trackers from links.Decentraleyes: blocks data requests from third-party networks. Disconnect: blocks trackers from "thousands" of third-party sites.Firefox Multi-Account Containers: separates your browsing into siloed "containers" to isolate each session from one another.PopUpOFF: blocks pop-ups, overlays, and cookie alerts.Privacy Badger: blocks invisible trackers.Proton VPN: Proton's Firefox add-on for its VPN.uBlock Origin: popular content blocker.Ed didn’t say how much of an impact this array of extensions and settings has on their browsing, save for YouTube, which they admit does sometimes give them trouble. However, Ed has workarounds: “When YouTube wants me to 'sign in to confirm you're not a bot,' changing VPN servers usually does the trick.” Ed also uses the audible clues for ReCAPTCHA prompts, rather than the pictures, since they don’t want to help train Google’s “braindead AI.”Ed deleted all their social media accounts, including Facebook, X, Instagram, and LinkedIn. Though they’ve never had TikTok installed on their phone, they will watch it in Firefox when a friend sends them a video. Jane uses an open-source smartphone OS designed for privacyWhile Edward Snowden may have kicked off Ed’s interest in personal privacy, "Jane" has many strong beliefs motivating their desire for privacy. They are concerned about data brokers and Meta’s practices of tracking internet activity, and how these companies build profiles based on that data to sell to third-parties; they’re concerned about the possibility of telecommunication companies tracking our locations via cellular towers; they worry about US law enforcement and agencies reviewing citizens’ social media accounts accounts and tracking people. Their focus on privacy is fueled by true concern for their own well-being, not only the value of privacy as a concept.      Jane uses a VPN on all of their devices. Instead of Proton, however, Jane opts for Mullvad. They enable ad and tracker blocking, as well as a kill switch, which blocks your internet if you lose connection with the VPN—thus protecting your connection from being leaked out of the secure network.I’m a big advocate for strong and unique passwords and proper password management, but Jane definitely beats me when it comes to secure credentials. Jane uses six to eight-word passphrases generated by diceware, a tactic that chooses words based on dice rolls. Something like this diceware generator will roll a die five times, then find a word in a bank based on that five-digit number. You can repeat this as many times as you want to come up with a passphrase built up with random words. Jane saves all of their passphrases to a password manager, except for the ones for important accounts, like their bank. They commit those to memory, just in case someone breaches their password manager.     Like Ed, Jane uses Mullvad, but instead of just using their VPN, they opt for the web browser, which has those protections built in. Mullvad’s strict privacy settings break persistent logins on websites, so any sites Jane wants to stay logged in on are kept in Brave browser. For both Mullvad and Brave, Jane uses uBlock Origin.“From time-to-time I do run into sites that will block access due to being on a VPN or blocking ads and trackers. Instead of disabling [my] VPN completely, switching my connection to one of Mullvad's rented servers instead of ones they own usually helps. Barring that, I occasionally go into [uBlock Origin] and temporarily whitelist a needed [URL] ([ReCAPTCHA] etc). This works for me to get around site blocks most of the time.”  Jane uses a Mac, and configured macOS based on various privacy guides. But instead of an iPhone, Jane opts for a Google Pixel. That might surprise readers who assumed hardcore privacy enthusiasts would break away from Google entirely. But X doesn’t run Android: Instead, they installed GrapheneOS on their Pixel, an open-source OS designed for privacy. Following a restart, Jane configured the Pixel to only unlock with a seven-word dice passphrase—for general use, they use a fingerprint scan and a six-digit PIN. If the don’t unlock their Pixel for a while, their phone automatically reboots to put it back into this “First Unlock” state. They also keep airplane mode on at all times to disable the phone’s radio communications, but maintain a wifi connection with timed automatic Bluetooth and wireless disabling. Jane also deleted all their social media accounts after downloading all data associated with those platforms.Mark uses phone and credit card masks“Mark” is perhaps the least hardcore of the respondents in this story, but that makes their experience both interesting and relatable. Unlike most of the people we spoke to, Mark is still on Facebook and Instagram. That’s due to their job, which requires them to be on the platform, but they’ve been “systematically” deleting everything they can over their 19-year Facebook history and saving the data to an external hard drive. Mark doesn’t follow anything that isn’t relevant to their job, and only uses Facebook and Instagram inside the DuckDuckGo browser. They don’t react to posts they see, and following their privacy tactics, Facebook doesn’t show them relevant ads anymore. “If there is an ad I'm actually interested in I'll search it up in a different browser rather than click it.”Mark has had four Google Accounts in their time online, and has deleted two so far. Like Facebook, they have to use Google for their job, but they delegate all their work to Chrome. All other browsing runs through Firefox, DuckDuckGo, or Tor. The latter is perhaps best known for being the browser of choice for browsing the dark web, but what makes it great for that is also what makes it a great choice for private browsing.Unlike others in this story, Mark hasn’t de-Googled themselves completely. In addition to using Chrome for work, Mark has a phone mask through Google, and has their contacts, calendar, and maps tied to the company—though they are moving away from Google as much as they can. They've been running through their old emails to find and delete outdated accounts they no longer use. Any accounts they do need now use an email mask that forwards to a Mailfence account, an encrypted email service.   Mark was the only respondent to talk about entertainment in relation to privacy: “I've also been switching to physical media over streaming, so buying CDs and DVDs, locally as much as possible. I'm lucky to have a local music store and a local bookstore...one of the owners of our bookstore wrote a book on how to resist Amazon and why. Any book I want, I can either order through them or on Alibris. For music, I use our local record store and Discogs.”When shopping online, Mark uses a credit card mask, but still uses the card itself when shopping in person. They want to start using a credit card mask in retail locations like Janet Vertesi, an associate professor of sociology at Princeton University, but they haven’t quite gotten there yet.   What really piqued my interest most about Mark, however, wasn’t their perspective on their own privacy concerns, but the concerns around the privacy of their kids: “They each have a Gmail, two of them have Snapchat. Their schools use Gaggle and Google to spy on them. I don't even know how to start disconnecting them from all this...I was a kid during the wild west of the internet and this feels like getting back to my roots. My kids are end users who understand apps and touchscreens, not torrenting their music or coding a basic website. (Is this my version of "I drank out of the garden hose"?) I feel like Big Data has its grip on the kids already and I don't have a guidebook on navigating that as a parent.”  Mark’s current focus on their kids’ privacy includes deleting their health data from their local health system. That’s in part due to a data breach impacting the health system, but also the language about autism from Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the current Secretary of Health and Human Services.Jay de-googled their life and uses a VoIP phone number"Jay's" origin story with personal privacy dates back to 2017. That year, Equifax suffered a major hack, where nearly 148 million Americans had sensitive data stolen and weren’t notified about the breach for months. Jay was frustrated: You don’t choose to give your data to Equifax, or any credit bureau, and yet so many people lost their data. They also felt that companies were not properly held responsible for these events, and lawmakers were simply too out of touch to do what was necessary to protect citizens’ privacy, so they took it upon themselves to protect their own data. Ever since this incident, Jay freezes their credit: “It was frustratingly difficult back then, but nowadays, it is very easy (it just requires an account, which I use a burner email for)...The freeze will not allow anyone to pull credit for large purchases in your name, even if they have your social security number (and because of the data breach, someone probably does). I decided I wanted to pursue some privacy for the things I do have a choice over.”  From here, Jay de-googled their life, including both Google Search as well as YouTube. They’ve found no issue with using alternative search engines, and, in fact, sees Google getting worse, as it tries to show you results based on what it thinks it knows about you, not what is most relevant to your actual query: “The internet was supposed to be a place you went to find information, not where you became the information that companies take instead."Jay uses tools to prevent fingerprinting, where companies identify you and track you across the internet, but worries that going too far with things like ad blockers puts a target on your back as well. Jay chooses to pick “a couple of effective tools,” and runs with those.For their smartphone needs, Jay goes with Apple. Like Ed, Jay doesn’t believe Apple is perfect, and even considers their privacy policies a bit of a gimmick, but sees them as the better alternative to Android. Jay likes the security of the App Store, and the array of privacy features in both Safari and Apple Accounts as a whole. They highlight Safari’s “Advanced Tracking and Fingerprinting Protection” feature, which helps block trackers as you browse the web; iCloud’s Private Relay, which hides your IP address; and “Hide My Email,” which generates email aliases you can share with others without giving your true email address away.Most of us are plagued with spam calls, but following the Robinhood data breach in 2021, Jay started receiving a flood of them. They decided to change their phone number and made a point of never sharing it with businesses. For the times they need to give out their number to parties they don’t trust, they use a number generated by My Sudo, which, for $20 per year, gives them a VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) phone number. It works with most services that rely on SMS, but it won’t function for two-factor authentication. (Which is fine, seeing as SMS-based 2FA is the weakest form of secondary authentication.) My Sudo lets you change your number for an additional $1, so if Jay’s number ever was compromised or started receiving too much spam, they could swap it.        Jay, like many respondents, deleted all social media services: “It has its place in society for a lot of people, and is no doubt a great way to connect. However, I found that the fear of deleting it was a lot worse than actually deleting it. The people you care about won’t forget you exist.” That said, Jay doesn't mind any of the obstacles this lifestyle does throw their way: “It is a challenging topic, as most people consider you a little bit 'out there' if you take steps to make your life a little less convenient, but more private. The modern world sells you convenience, while pretending it is free, and harvesting your data for so much more than you actually get out of your relationship to them.”      What it takes to be private on the modern internetThere's no one way to tackle personal privacy. Every one of the respondents to our query had something unique about their approach, and many had different motivations behind why they were so concerned about their privacy.There are plenty of common through lines, of course. Most privacy people love Proton, which makes sense. Proton seems to be the only company that offers a suite of apps most closely resembling Google's while also prioritizing privacy. If you want your email, calendar, word processor, and even your VPN all tied up nicely under one privacy-focused umbrella, that's Proton. But not everyone wants an ecosystem, either. That's why you see respondents using other VPNs, like Mullvad, or other private storage options, like Tresorit. These apps and services exist—they might just not be owned by one company, like Apple or Google (or Proton).Google and Meta are more commonalities, in that most privacy enthusiasts ditch them entirely. Some, like Mark, haven't been able to fully shake off these data-hungry companies. In Mark's case, that's because they need these platforms for work. But while most hardcore privacy people delete their Google and Meta accounts, most of us have trouble de-Googling and de-Metaing our digital lives. In general, though, the keys to privacy success include the following: Use a VPN to protect your internet traffic; prioritize privacy in your web browser, both through the browser itself, as well as extensions that block ads and protect your traffic; shield your sensitive information whenever possible, by using email aliases, alternate phone numbers, or credit card masks; use strong and unique passwords for all accounts, and store those passwords in a secure password manager; use two-factor authentication whenever possible (perhaps passkeys, when available); and stick to end-to-end encrypted chat apps to communicate with others. While there's always more you can do, that's the perfect storm to keep your digital life as private as reasonably possible. Some might read through the examples here and see steps that are too much effort to be worth it. It might seem out of reach to ditch Gmail and Instagram, break certain websites, and force your friends and family to learn new numbers and email addresses to protect your privacy, especially if you don't feel your privacy has that much of an impact on your life. But even if you aren't sold on the concept of privacy itself, there are real-world results from sticking with these methods. Jay no longer receives spam calls and texts; Mark no longer sees ads that are freakishly relevant to their likes. It's a lifestyle change, to be sure, but it's not just to serve some concept of privacy. You can see results by changing the way you interact with the internet, all without having to actually disconnect from the internet, and, by extension, the world at large.
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  • Switch 2 UK General Discussion Thread: 2 weeks out - add some cheese to your beans

    Heazy
    IT Tech
    Verified

    Oct 28, 2017

    4,643

    London, UK

    Nintendo Switch 2 UK £395.99 / £429.99original screenshot dead

    From Nintendo UK site 

    Last edited: Apr 11, 2025

    NippleViking
    Member

    May 2, 2018

    4,702

    Jesus. AUD then?
     

    Doctor_Thomas
    Member

    Oct 27, 2017

    11,467

    Ooof.
     

    raspberrymousse
    Member

    Mar 19, 2021

    5,302

    Cheaper than I thought
     

    Stitch AU
    Member

    Oct 29, 2017

    581

    Brisbane, Australia

    What the fuck, thats AU for the mario kart edition.
     

    Type VII
    Member

    Oct 31, 2017

    2,977

    I was expecting £425 so not too bad. At least we know when the preorders go live.
     

    CasuallyDressed
    Member

    Jan 13, 2020

    1,497

    Eek.
     

    Helix
    Mayor of Clown Town
    Member

    Jun 8, 2019

    27,003

    i thought it was going to be 50 quid cheaper
     

    xendless
    Teyvat Traveler
    Member

    Jan 23, 2019

    13,720

    Nintendo UK store crashed already it's utterly fucked when preorders drop
     

    Fevaweva
    Member

    Oct 30, 2017

    7,589

    That is about what I expected to be quite honest.
     

    Hutchie
    Member

    Oct 27, 2017

    1,791

    London

    Decent but will wait n see how much cex sell em so can get rid of my remaining voucher
     

    Charlie0108
    Member

    Oct 29, 2017

    4,600

    I have £460 set aside for it so ok for me but I was expecting it to be about £50 cheaper.
     

    discogs
    Member

    Oct 28, 2017

    516

    London

    When are UK preorders coming?
     

    xendless
    Teyvat Traveler
    Member

    Jan 23, 2019

    13,720

    Hutchie said:

    Decent but will wait n see how much cex sell em so can get rid of my remaining voucher

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    On the Switch 1 launch it was way above rrp

    discogs said:

    When are UK preorders coming?

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    The OP image dude.... 

    Swarming1182
    Member

    Jan 14, 2018

    534

    Hell yeah.
     

    Hutchie
    Member

    Oct 27, 2017

    1,791

    London

    xendless said:

    Only Switch 1 launch it was way above rrp

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    Looks like im waiting 6 months 

    DECK’ARD
    Creator of Worms
    Verified

    Nov 26, 2017

    7,157

    UK

    What I was expecting.

    Now open the preorders someone! 

    ItsBradazHD
    Member

    Nov 21, 2018

    835

    35 quid extra for mario kart is crazy value
     

    J Snow
    Member

    Oct 25, 2017

    452

    About what I expected

    Hutchie said:

    Decent but will wait n see how much cex sell em so can get rid of my remaining voucher

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    I was thinking this but I went in today and they're selling second hand games more expensive than Argos a few doors down, I would really love to know what "algorithm" they use to calculate pricing
     

    Tora
    The Enlightened Wise Ones
    Member

    Jun 17, 2018

    8,983

    Easily justifiable
     

    Ara63
    Member

    Nov 21, 2023

    1,185

    Given the other pricing news, if you care about Mario Kart at all buying that UK bundle is likely the cheapest deal for anyone worldwide.
     

    Lowrys
    Member

    Oct 25, 2017

    14,664

    London

    discogs said:

    When are UK preorders coming?

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    8 April. Gives all the scalpers and bots time to get ready ans vacuum them all up. Ridiculous. Just make them live now and let consumers have a chance.
     

    Hutchie
    Member

    Oct 27, 2017

    1,791

    London

    Anyone got software prices? Apparently mario kart is €90 physical
     

    Raiden
    Member

    Nov 6, 2017

    3,032

    Okay i'll take it. Do we have a official release date?
     

    Axe
    Member

    Oct 27, 2017

    3,590

    United Kingdom

    I honestly was bracing for worse pricing for us.
     

    geehepea
    Member

    Aug 5, 2024

    358

    about what I expected
     

    Byron Hinson
    Member

    Nov 14, 2017

    1,361

    UK

    It'll be the cart pricing that's the killer
     

    Swarming1182
    Member

    Jan 14, 2018

    534

    Annoyed they chose to delay pre-orders. it just lets scalpers and bots grab them.

    The price is incredibly reasonable given the evident horsepower of this device, and especially with the Mario Kart World bundle, crazy good value. 

    Gowans
    Moderator

    Oct 27, 2017

    5,833

    North East, UK

    What about UK games prices?
     

    Helix
    Mayor of Clown Town
    Member

    Jun 8, 2019

    27,003

    ngl though i'm not keen on getting MK World, it's crazy not to get that bundle cuz MK is just expensive on its own lol
     

    harry the spy
    Member

    Oct 25, 2017

    3,376

    Do we know where we will be able to preorder from
     

    Mutedpenguin
    Member

    Dec 5, 2017

    1,392

    Obviously I'll get the Mario Kart bundle...but I feel it would be a much easier sell to the masses, if it was £399 including the game.
     

    GovernWort
    Prophet of Truth
    Member

    Feb 20, 2020

    1,093

    Gowans said:

    What about UK games prices?

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    View:
     

    Bishop89
    What Are Ya' Selling?
    Member

    Oct 25, 2017

    42,772

    Melbourne, Australia

    Stitch AU said:

    What the fuck, thats AU for the mario kart edition.

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    More than a ps5, crazy.
     

    Willy
    Member

    Oct 27, 2017

    402

    I said £379 at the lowest previously so I wasn't far off. Honestly, not the worst price if you want Mario Kart World in the bundle. I think I'll be waiting for more first party games to come out though.

    edit - £75 physical games. Ouch. 

    cursed beef
    Member

    Jan 3, 2021

    946

    so physical is just dead dead huh? nintendo said fuck families
     

    Gowans
    Moderator

    Oct 27, 2017

    5,833

    North East, UK

    Thank you, £75 seems wild esspecially in an age of cheap PC games and Game Pass. 

    GovernWort
    Prophet of Truth
    Member

    Feb 20, 2020

    1,093

    This is on the Nintendo UK site.

    Pro controller is £75 and the GC controller is £59 

    IIFloodyII
    Member

    Oct 26, 2017

    27,432

    Was expecting 400 so not too bad ther. But they can absolutely fuck off with the £75 for games.
     

    Helix
    Mayor of Clown Town
    Member

    Jun 8, 2019

    27,003

    75 quid for flagship Nintendo games?…..
     

    geehepea
    Member

    Aug 5, 2024

    358

    Prices for all accessories and software announced in the direct

    Edit: also noticed this smallprint on the page

    Pre-orders for Nintendo Switch 2 digital games, upgrade packs and amiibo will open on My Nintendo Store from 24/04. 

    Koukalaka
    Member

    Oct 28, 2017

    10,399

    Scotland

    ItsBradazHD said:

    35 quid extra for mario kart is crazy value

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    Yeah, I expect the bundle will fly off the shelves considering it's a £30 saving 

    Snarfington
    Avenger

    Oct 25, 2017

    3,154

    GovernWort said:

    This is on the Nintendo UK site.

    Pro controller is £75 and the GC controller is £59
    Click to expand...
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    Hmm I think I qualify but will have to check on the emails, wonder where I can do that? Hope it's not some rando newsletter 

    GokouD
    Member

    Oct 30, 2017

    1,348

    Game prices could be worse really, given the euro/dollar prices. And that's from the Nintendo store, you can probably knock £10 off or Smyths.
     

    shadowman16
    Member

    Oct 25, 2017

    41,549

    Not super happy about the prices... but Im a fool and will be getting DK and MK for sure... ANd Yakuza and SF...
     

    jazzfunkgreats
    Member

    Oct 7, 2019

    307

    I fit the criteria for the invitation thing on playtime and subscription length but I've only just turned on newsletters now, so I'm not expecting much. I knew I should have just embraced the spam
     

    JayCB64
    Member

    Oct 25, 2017

    11,418

    Wales

    Honestly I thought it would be a little worse lol
     

    IDreamOfHime
    Member

    Oct 27, 2017

    16,363

    I don't actually mind that price, especially the Mario Kart bundle price.

    Hoping to buy from Amazon....kept my Xmas gift vouchers for this.

    My plan this gen is digital only, I don't have the space for boxes anymore. 

    Ocarina_117
    Member

    Oct 26, 2017

    9,887

    Not as angry as others with this pricing to be honest.

    I get a tonne of time out of Nintendo games and their first party releases are spaced out nicely. 

    LewieP
    Member

    Oct 26, 2017

    19,822

    I was expecting £399 for the system to saved a cool £4.
     
    #switch #general #discussion #thread #weeks
    Switch 2 UK General Discussion Thread: 2 weeks out - add some cheese to your beans
    Heazy IT Tech Verified Oct 28, 2017 4,643 London, UK Nintendo Switch 2 UK £395.99 / £429.99original screenshot dead From Nintendo UK site  Last edited: Apr 11, 2025 NippleViking Member May 2, 2018 4,702 Jesus. AUD then?   Doctor_Thomas Member Oct 27, 2017 11,467 Ooof.   raspberrymousse Member Mar 19, 2021 5,302 Cheaper than I thought   Stitch AU Member Oct 29, 2017 581 Brisbane, Australia What the fuck, thats AU for the mario kart edition.   Type VII Member Oct 31, 2017 2,977 I was expecting £425 so not too bad. At least we know when the preorders go live.   CasuallyDressed Member Jan 13, 2020 1,497 Eek.   Helix Mayor of Clown Town Member Jun 8, 2019 27,003 i thought it was going to be 50 quid cheaper   xendless Teyvat Traveler Member Jan 23, 2019 13,720 Nintendo UK store crashed already it's utterly fucked when preorders drop   Fevaweva Member Oct 30, 2017 7,589 That is about what I expected to be quite honest.   Hutchie Member Oct 27, 2017 1,791 London Decent but will wait n see how much cex sell em so can get rid of my remaining voucher   Charlie0108 Member Oct 29, 2017 4,600 I have £460 set aside for it so ok for me but I was expecting it to be about £50 cheaper.   discogs Member Oct 28, 2017 516 London When are UK preorders coming?   xendless Teyvat Traveler Member Jan 23, 2019 13,720 Hutchie said: Decent but will wait n see how much cex sell em so can get rid of my remaining voucher Click to expand... Click to shrink... On the Switch 1 launch it was way above rrp discogs said: When are UK preorders coming? Click to expand... Click to shrink... The OP image dude....  Swarming1182 Member Jan 14, 2018 534 Hell yeah.   Hutchie Member Oct 27, 2017 1,791 London xendless said: Only Switch 1 launch it was way above rrp Click to expand... Click to shrink... Looks like im waiting 6 months  DECK’ARD Creator of Worms Verified Nov 26, 2017 7,157 UK What I was expecting. Now open the preorders someone!  ItsBradazHD Member Nov 21, 2018 835 35 quid extra for mario kart is crazy value   J Snow Member Oct 25, 2017 452 About what I expected Hutchie said: Decent but will wait n see how much cex sell em so can get rid of my remaining voucher Click to expand... Click to shrink... I was thinking this but I went in today and they're selling second hand games more expensive than Argos a few doors down, I would really love to know what "algorithm" they use to calculate pricing   Tora The Enlightened Wise Ones Member Jun 17, 2018 8,983 Easily justifiable   Ara63 Member Nov 21, 2023 1,185 Given the other pricing news, if you care about Mario Kart at all buying that UK bundle is likely the cheapest deal for anyone worldwide.   Lowrys Member Oct 25, 2017 14,664 London discogs said: When are UK preorders coming? Click to expand... Click to shrink... 8 April. Gives all the scalpers and bots time to get ready ans vacuum them all up. Ridiculous. Just make them live now and let consumers have a chance.   Hutchie Member Oct 27, 2017 1,791 London Anyone got software prices? Apparently mario kart is €90 physical   Raiden Member Nov 6, 2017 3,032 Okay i'll take it. Do we have a official release date?   Axe Member Oct 27, 2017 3,590 United Kingdom I honestly was bracing for worse pricing for us.   geehepea Member Aug 5, 2024 358 about what I expected   Byron Hinson Member Nov 14, 2017 1,361 UK It'll be the cart pricing that's the killer   Swarming1182 Member Jan 14, 2018 534 Annoyed they chose to delay pre-orders. it just lets scalpers and bots grab them. The price is incredibly reasonable given the evident horsepower of this device, and especially with the Mario Kart World bundle, crazy good value.  Gowans Moderator Oct 27, 2017 5,833 North East, UK What about UK games prices?   Helix Mayor of Clown Town Member Jun 8, 2019 27,003 ngl though i'm not keen on getting MK World, it's crazy not to get that bundle cuz MK is just expensive on its own lol   harry the spy Member Oct 25, 2017 3,376 Do we know where we will be able to preorder from   Mutedpenguin Member Dec 5, 2017 1,392 Obviously I'll get the Mario Kart bundle...but I feel it would be a much easier sell to the masses, if it was £399 including the game.   GovernWort Prophet of Truth Member Feb 20, 2020 1,093 Gowans said: What about UK games prices? Click to expand... Click to shrink... View:   Bishop89 What Are Ya' Selling? Member Oct 25, 2017 42,772 Melbourne, Australia Stitch AU said: What the fuck, thats AU for the mario kart edition. Click to expand... Click to shrink... More than a ps5, crazy.   Willy Member Oct 27, 2017 402 I said £379 at the lowest previously so I wasn't far off. Honestly, not the worst price if you want Mario Kart World in the bundle. I think I'll be waiting for more first party games to come out though. edit - £75 physical games. Ouch.  cursed beef Member Jan 3, 2021 946 so physical is just dead dead huh? nintendo said fuck families   Gowans Moderator Oct 27, 2017 5,833 North East, UK Thank you, £75 seems wild esspecially in an age of cheap PC games and Game Pass.  GovernWort Prophet of Truth Member Feb 20, 2020 1,093 This is on the Nintendo UK site. Pro controller is £75 and the GC controller is £59  IIFloodyII Member Oct 26, 2017 27,432 Was expecting 400 so not too bad ther. But they can absolutely fuck off with the £75 for games.   Helix Mayor of Clown Town Member Jun 8, 2019 27,003 75 quid for flagship Nintendo games?…..   geehepea Member Aug 5, 2024 358 Prices for all accessories and software announced in the direct Edit: also noticed this smallprint on the page Pre-orders for Nintendo Switch 2 digital games, upgrade packs and amiibo will open on My Nintendo Store from 24/04.  Koukalaka Member Oct 28, 2017 10,399 Scotland ItsBradazHD said: 35 quid extra for mario kart is crazy value Click to expand... Click to shrink... Yeah, I expect the bundle will fly off the shelves considering it's a £30 saving  Snarfington Avenger Oct 25, 2017 3,154 GovernWort said: This is on the Nintendo UK site. Pro controller is £75 and the GC controller is £59 Click to expand... Click to shrink... Hmm I think I qualify but will have to check on the emails, wonder where I can do that? Hope it's not some rando newsletter  GokouD Member Oct 30, 2017 1,348 Game prices could be worse really, given the euro/dollar prices. And that's from the Nintendo store, you can probably knock £10 off or Smyths.   shadowman16 Member Oct 25, 2017 41,549 Not super happy about the prices... but Im a fool and will be getting DK and MK for sure... ANd Yakuza and SF...   jazzfunkgreats Member Oct 7, 2019 307 I fit the criteria for the invitation thing on playtime and subscription length but I've only just turned on newsletters now, so I'm not expecting much. I knew I should have just embraced the spam   JayCB64 Member Oct 25, 2017 11,418 Wales Honestly I thought it would be a little worse lol   IDreamOfHime Member Oct 27, 2017 16,363 I don't actually mind that price, especially the Mario Kart bundle price. Hoping to buy from Amazon....kept my Xmas gift vouchers for this. My plan this gen is digital only, I don't have the space for boxes anymore.  Ocarina_117 Member Oct 26, 2017 9,887 Not as angry as others with this pricing to be honest. I get a tonne of time out of Nintendo games and their first party releases are spaced out nicely.  LewieP Member Oct 26, 2017 19,822 I was expecting £399 for the system to saved a cool £4.   #switch #general #discussion #thread #weeks
    WWW.RESETERA.COM
    Switch 2 UK General Discussion Thread: 2 weeks out - add some cheese to your beans
    Heazy IT Tech Verified Oct 28, 2017 4,643 London, UK Nintendo Switch 2 UK £395.99 / £429.99 (w/ Mario Kart World) original screenshot dead From Nintendo UK site  Last edited: Apr 11, 2025 NippleViking Member May 2, 2018 4,702 Jesus. $800 AUD then?   Doctor_Thomas Member Oct 27, 2017 11,467 Ooof.   raspberrymousse Member Mar 19, 2021 5,302 Cheaper than I thought   Stitch AU Member Oct 29, 2017 581 Brisbane, Australia What the fuck, thats $880AU for the mario kart edition.   Type VII Member Oct 31, 2017 2,977 I was expecting £425 so not too bad. At least we know when the preorders go live.   CasuallyDressed Member Jan 13, 2020 1,497 Eek.   Helix Mayor of Clown Town Member Jun 8, 2019 27,003 i thought it was going to be 50 quid cheaper   xendless Teyvat Traveler Member Jan 23, 2019 13,720 Nintendo UK store crashed already it's utterly fucked when preorders drop   Fevaweva Member Oct 30, 2017 7,589 That is about what I expected to be quite honest.   Hutchie Member Oct 27, 2017 1,791 London Decent but will wait n see how much cex sell em so can get rid of my remaining voucher   Charlie0108 Member Oct 29, 2017 4,600 I have £460 set aside for it so ok for me but I was expecting it to be about £50 cheaper.   discogs Member Oct 28, 2017 516 London When are UK preorders coming?   xendless Teyvat Traveler Member Jan 23, 2019 13,720 Hutchie said: Decent but will wait n see how much cex sell em so can get rid of my remaining voucher Click to expand... Click to shrink... On the Switch 1 launch it was way above rrp discogs said: When are UK preorders coming? Click to expand... Click to shrink... The OP image dude....  Swarming1182 Member Jan 14, 2018 534 Hell yeah.   Hutchie Member Oct 27, 2017 1,791 London xendless said: Only Switch 1 launch it was way above rrp Click to expand... Click to shrink... Looks like im waiting 6 months  DECK’ARD Creator of Worms Verified Nov 26, 2017 7,157 UK What I was expecting. Now open the preorders someone!  ItsBradazHD Member Nov 21, 2018 835 35 quid extra for mario kart is crazy value   J Snow Member Oct 25, 2017 452 About what I expected Hutchie said: Decent but will wait n see how much cex sell em so can get rid of my remaining voucher Click to expand... Click to shrink... I was thinking this but I went in today and they're selling second hand games more expensive than Argos a few doors down, I would really love to know what "algorithm" they use to calculate pricing   Tora The Enlightened Wise Ones Member Jun 17, 2018 8,983 Easily justifiable   Ara63 Member Nov 21, 2023 1,185 Given the other pricing news, if you care about Mario Kart at all buying that UK bundle is likely the cheapest deal for anyone worldwide.   Lowrys Member Oct 25, 2017 14,664 London discogs said: When are UK preorders coming? Click to expand... Click to shrink... 8 April. Gives all the scalpers and bots time to get ready ans vacuum them all up. Ridiculous. Just make them live now and let consumers have a chance.   Hutchie Member Oct 27, 2017 1,791 London Anyone got software prices? Apparently mario kart is €90 physical   Raiden Member Nov 6, 2017 3,032 Okay i'll take it. Do we have a official release date?   Axe Member Oct 27, 2017 3,590 United Kingdom I honestly was bracing for worse pricing for us.   geehepea Member Aug 5, 2024 358 about what I expected   Byron Hinson Member Nov 14, 2017 1,361 UK It'll be the cart pricing that's the killer   Swarming1182 Member Jan 14, 2018 534 Annoyed they chose to delay pre-orders. it just lets scalpers and bots grab them. The price is incredibly reasonable given the evident horsepower of this device, and especially with the Mario Kart World bundle, crazy good value.  Gowans Moderator Oct 27, 2017 5,833 North East, UK What about UK games prices?   Helix Mayor of Clown Town Member Jun 8, 2019 27,003 ngl though i'm not keen on getting MK World, it's crazy not to get that bundle cuz MK is just expensive on its own lol   harry the spy Member Oct 25, 2017 3,376 Do we know where we will be able to preorder from   Mutedpenguin Member Dec 5, 2017 1,392 Obviously I'll get the Mario Kart bundle(if I can)...but I feel it would be a much easier sell to the masses, if it was £399 including the game.   GovernWort Prophet of Truth Member Feb 20, 2020 1,093 Gowans said: What about UK games prices? Click to expand... Click to shrink... View: https://imgur.com/yzDDQ4Y   Bishop89 What Are Ya' Selling? Member Oct 25, 2017 42,772 Melbourne, Australia Stitch AU said: What the fuck, thats $880AU for the mario kart edition. Click to expand... Click to shrink... More than a ps5, crazy.   Willy Member Oct 27, 2017 402 I said £379 at the lowest previously so I wasn't far off. Honestly, not the worst price if you want Mario Kart World in the bundle. I think I'll be waiting for more first party games to come out though. edit - £75 physical games. Ouch.  cursed beef Member Jan 3, 2021 946 so physical is just dead dead huh? nintendo said fuck families   Gowans Moderator Oct 27, 2017 5,833 North East, UK Thank you, £75 seems wild esspecially in an age of cheap PC games and Game Pass.  GovernWort Prophet of Truth Member Feb 20, 2020 1,093 This is on the Nintendo UK site. Pro controller is £75 and the GC controller is £59  IIFloodyII Member Oct 26, 2017 27,432 Was expecting 400 so not too bad ther. But they can absolutely fuck off with the £75 for games.   Helix Mayor of Clown Town Member Jun 8, 2019 27,003 75 quid for flagship Nintendo games?…..   geehepea Member Aug 5, 2024 358 Prices for all accessories and software announced in the direct Edit: also noticed this smallprint on the page Pre-orders for Nintendo Switch 2 digital games, upgrade packs and amiibo will open on My Nintendo Store from 24/04.  Koukalaka Member Oct 28, 2017 10,399 Scotland ItsBradazHD said: 35 quid extra for mario kart is crazy value Click to expand... Click to shrink... Yeah, I expect the bundle will fly off the shelves considering it's a £30 saving  Snarfington Avenger Oct 25, 2017 3,154 GovernWort said: This is on the Nintendo UK site. Pro controller is £75 and the GC controller is £59 Click to expand... Click to shrink... Hmm I think I qualify but will have to check on the emails, wonder where I can do that? Hope it's not some rando newsletter  GokouD Member Oct 30, 2017 1,348 Game prices could be worse really, given the euro/dollar prices. And that's from the Nintendo store, you can probably knock £10 off at Amazon or Smyths.   shadowman16 Member Oct 25, 2017 41,549 Not super happy about the prices... but Im a fool and will be getting DK and MK for sure... ANd Yakuza and SF...   jazzfunkgreats Member Oct 7, 2019 307 I fit the criteria for the invitation thing on playtime and subscription length but I've only just turned on newsletters now, so I'm not expecting much. I knew I should have just embraced the spam   JayCB64 Member Oct 25, 2017 11,418 Wales Honestly I thought it would be a little worse lol   IDreamOfHime Member Oct 27, 2017 16,363 I don't actually mind that price, especially the Mario Kart bundle price. Hoping to buy from Amazon....kept my Xmas gift vouchers for this. My plan this gen is digital only, I don't have the space for boxes anymore.  Ocarina_117 Member Oct 26, 2017 9,887 Not as angry as others with this pricing to be honest. I get a tonne of time out of Nintendo games and their first party releases are spaced out nicely.  LewieP Member Oct 26, 2017 19,822 I was expecting £399 for the system to saved a cool £4.  
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  • Discogs Inc: Senior Site Reliability Engineer - Data (REMOTE)

    The Discogs Platform team is focused on several objectives: building and supporting performant, cost-effective, reliable infrastructure; developer experience tooling and mentorship; and creating "golden paths" for organization-wide standards and velocity. As a key member of the Platform team, the Senior Site Reliability Engineer - Data will be working closely with other Discogs engineering squads to develop and optimize scalable, well-planned relational database architectures, drive best practices and stability for our use of Kafka and change data capture, and contribute to the Platform team’s operations.LocationThis is a remote position. Open to candidates located in OR, WA, CA, CO, TX, ILCompensationStarting Base Salary Range: - yearlyWhat You’ll AccomplishReasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions.Stewarding Discogs’ data stores as a key subject matter expertLeading efforts on the reliability and design patterns of our Kafka and Kafka Connect implementationsEstablishing data contracts and clear communication standards between CDC producers and consumersWorking closely with engineering squads to refactor and re-architect MySQL database schema and indexing for long-term scalability, performance, and cost effectivenessMentoring engineering squads on Platform best practices for MySQL, Kafka, and other software development lifecycle areas Writing documentation and runbooks that contribute to the engineering organization’s knowledge baseWorking in a containerized, orchestrated environmentContributing to the Platform team’s disciplines of site reliability and operations, supporting both our squads and Platform’s central infrastructureParticipating in on-call rotation, responding to incidents, and troubleshooting data and other operations issuesWhat You’ll ContributeMinimum Education and ExperienceA Bachelor's Degree in Computer Science or similar area of focus, or equivalent relevant work experience.5+ years of experience working with Kafka and relational database management systems.6+ years experience in Ops, DevOps, Site Reliability, Platform or other systems roles.Required Skills & Abilities:Relational database schema design, query performance optimization, administrationKafka: Cluster administration, Kafka ConnectCI/CDGitOpsKubernetesAWS and cloud developmentObservabilityScriptingTrack record of collaboration and mentorshipExcellent written communication and documentation skillsContinuous learningOwnership and proactive approach to solving large problemsPreferred:Infrastructure-as-codeElasticsearchPythonGraphQLREST APIHashicorp VaultRedisMemcachedNoSQL DatabaseData Lake/WarehouseData GovernanceData SecurityThe Platform team covers a wide range of technical topics and we'd love to hear about your skills beyond this list!Apply NowLet's start your dream job Apply now Meet JobCopilot: Your Personal AI Job HunterAutomatically Apply to Remote DevOps and Sysadmin JobsJust set your preferences and Job Copilot will do the rest-finding, filtering, and applying while you focus on what matters. Activate JobCopilot
    #discogs #inc #senior #site #reliability
    Discogs Inc: Senior Site Reliability Engineer - Data (REMOTE)
    The Discogs Platform team is focused on several objectives: building and supporting performant, cost-effective, reliable infrastructure; developer experience tooling and mentorship; and creating "golden paths" for organization-wide standards and velocity. As a key member of the Platform team, the Senior Site Reliability Engineer - Data will be working closely with other Discogs engineering squads to develop and optimize scalable, well-planned relational database architectures, drive best practices and stability for our use of Kafka and change data capture, and contribute to the Platform team’s operations.LocationThis is a remote position. Open to candidates located in OR, WA, CA, CO, TX, ILCompensationStarting Base Salary Range: - yearlyWhat You’ll AccomplishReasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions.Stewarding Discogs’ data stores as a key subject matter expertLeading efforts on the reliability and design patterns of our Kafka and Kafka Connect implementationsEstablishing data contracts and clear communication standards between CDC producers and consumersWorking closely with engineering squads to refactor and re-architect MySQL database schema and indexing for long-term scalability, performance, and cost effectivenessMentoring engineering squads on Platform best practices for MySQL, Kafka, and other software development lifecycle areas Writing documentation and runbooks that contribute to the engineering organization’s knowledge baseWorking in a containerized, orchestrated environmentContributing to the Platform team’s disciplines of site reliability and operations, supporting both our squads and Platform’s central infrastructureParticipating in on-call rotation, responding to incidents, and troubleshooting data and other operations issuesWhat You’ll ContributeMinimum Education and ExperienceA Bachelor's Degree in Computer Science or similar area of focus, or equivalent relevant work experience.5+ years of experience working with Kafka and relational database management systems.6+ years experience in Ops, DevOps, Site Reliability, Platform or other systems roles.Required Skills & Abilities:Relational database schema design, query performance optimization, administrationKafka: Cluster administration, Kafka ConnectCI/CDGitOpsKubernetesAWS and cloud developmentObservabilityScriptingTrack record of collaboration and mentorshipExcellent written communication and documentation skillsContinuous learningOwnership and proactive approach to solving large problemsPreferred:Infrastructure-as-codeElasticsearchPythonGraphQLREST APIHashicorp VaultRedisMemcachedNoSQL DatabaseData Lake/WarehouseData GovernanceData SecurityThe Platform team covers a wide range of technical topics and we'd love to hear about your skills beyond this list!Apply NowLet's start your dream job Apply now Meet JobCopilot: Your Personal AI Job HunterAutomatically Apply to Remote DevOps and Sysadmin JobsJust set your preferences and Job Copilot will do the rest-finding, filtering, and applying while you focus on what matters. Activate JobCopilot #discogs #inc #senior #site #reliability
    WEWORKREMOTELY.COM
    Discogs Inc: Senior Site Reliability Engineer - Data (REMOTE)
    The Discogs Platform team is focused on several objectives: building and supporting performant, cost-effective, reliable infrastructure; developer experience tooling and mentorship; and creating "golden paths" for organization-wide standards and velocity. As a key member of the Platform team, the Senior Site Reliability Engineer - Data will be working closely with other Discogs engineering squads to develop and optimize scalable, well-planned relational database architectures, drive best practices and stability for our use of Kafka and change data capture, and contribute to the Platform team’s operations.LocationThis is a remote position. Open to candidates located in OR, WA, CA, CO, TX, ILCompensationStarting Base Salary Range: $130,000 - $140,000 yearlyWhat You’ll AccomplishReasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions.Stewarding Discogs’ data stores as a key subject matter expertLeading efforts on the reliability and design patterns of our Kafka and Kafka Connect implementationsEstablishing data contracts and clear communication standards between CDC producers and consumersWorking closely with engineering squads to refactor and re-architect MySQL database schema and indexing for long-term scalability, performance, and cost effectivenessMentoring engineering squads on Platform best practices for MySQL, Kafka, and other software development lifecycle areas Writing documentation and runbooks that contribute to the engineering organization’s knowledge baseWorking in a containerized, orchestrated environmentContributing to the Platform team’s disciplines of site reliability and operations, supporting both our squads and Platform’s central infrastructureParticipating in on-call rotation, responding to incidents, and troubleshooting data and other operations issuesWhat You’ll ContributeMinimum Education and ExperienceA Bachelor's Degree in Computer Science or similar area of focus, or equivalent relevant work experience.5+ years of experience working with Kafka and relational database management systems (RDBMS).6+ years experience in Ops, DevOps, Site Reliability, Platform or other systems roles.Required Skills & Abilities:Relational database schema design, query performance optimization, administration (MySQL, Percona Server, AWS RDS)Kafka: Cluster administration (Strimzi), Kafka Connect (Debezium, JDBC)CI/CD (GitHub Actions)GitOps (ArgoCD)Kubernetes (EKS, Kustomize, Karpenter, administration, application manifests)AWS and cloud development (VPC, EKS, RDS, S3)Observability (Datadog, Sentry)Scripting (Shell, Python)Track record of collaboration and mentorshipExcellent written communication and documentation skillsContinuous learningOwnership and proactive approach to solving large problemsPreferred:Infrastructure-as-code (Terraform)Elasticsearch (ECK administration, scaling, performance)Python (SQLAlchemy, FastAPI)GraphQL (schema design, Apollo federation)REST APIHashicorp VaultRedisMemcachedNoSQL DatabaseData Lake/WarehouseData GovernanceData SecurityThe Platform team covers a wide range of technical topics and we'd love to hear about your skills beyond this list!Apply NowLet's start your dream job Apply now Meet JobCopilot: Your Personal AI Job HunterAutomatically Apply to Remote DevOps and Sysadmin JobsJust set your preferences and Job Copilot will do the rest-finding, filtering, and applying while you focus on what matters. Activate JobCopilot
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