The question of whether we’ll be uploading our consciousness to a computer is no longer if. It’s probably when. That’s because these digital consciousnesses – our essences – will likely be the product of an AI’s interpretation of ourselves. The breadcrumbs we’ll leave across digital files, images, videos, audio recordings, and, of course, all that social media will be an ample resource to reconstruct you.
My friends created a FB account a long time ago, and I did end up using it briefly. I haven’t logged into the account in probably 10 years and have no clue what my password is. Thoughts on whether I should bother giving Meta more personal information in order to try to log in & delete that account?
I avoided that shitty website like the plague. Used a fake account to make an account for my quest 2, then used Oculess to cut it off from facebook forever, so I can just play my TeamBeef ports and indie vr games without big brother. Fuck facebook.
Deleted my account in Fall 2025 after +15 years. Felt good
i dont have a facekbook account, never will. i use UBLOCK origin to bypass the login popup, to access downloads for an old pc game, that doesnt produce newer maps in other sites.
Or just stop playing a game that is providing content via Facebook. Wtf are you thinking?
Literally no game is worth that.
This is stupid af.
Bad take, why should they stop
If Cambridge Analytica wasn’t enough of a reason to leave Facebook, then you will probably continue using Facebook today even after reading this.
Facebook should have been shutdown then. Actually, it should have been shutdown even before then since the Edward Snowden leaks.
The actions of users (or lack of user actions) from back then have brought us to the issues of today. The information has been out there for over a decade.
Cambridge Analytica was not enough of a reason to leave Facebook for me, because at that point I had already stopped actively using the site a long time ago and deleting my effectively inactive account seemed like a lot of effort for very little practical purpose.
This article (or just the headline to be honest) was finally enough to push me to actually go through with logging in one last time to finally get rid of it.
You all still have Facebook accounts???
Unfortunately a side hustle for me is buying cars, putting in some work, and flipping them. Facebook Marketplace has a grasp on the personal classified ads. Craigslist still exists, but results are slim in my area.
I really hate it because I’ll go to look at cars, but end up scrolling mindlessly on the feed.
Do you get scammers much?
I tried looking for camera lenses, logged out and with some scripting, and ran into some pretty clear scams immediately. Like no-one is even policing the site.
Depends on how you view it. If you’re just a buyer, I feel it’s pretty easy to spot scams. Though there are absolutely exceptions to that.
As a seller though, a constant barrage of scammers, dumbasses, and low ballers alike.
I fully agree about the moderation. I don’t think there is enough moderators to keep up with how many listings are up.
It’s really hard to get people to suffer mild inconvenience when they don’t emotionally connect with the benefits.
Most of facebook’s evils are remote and impersonal. Seeing your cousin’s baby photos is real and at hand.
Still can’t figure out why people started using that crap in the first place, didn’t this seem really obvious?
In any case, that also means Instagram too, you know that right?
Most of the people I know created their account like around 2012 as teens. It wasn’t obvious back then.
It was obvious back then.
Sure. We all knew that super computers from the future get trained to imitate our shitty meaningless teenager posts after our death.
That isn’t the only issue, it’s just the latest. Handing over all your personal data, to a system that would obviously combine, extract, manipulate and sell your information seemed like a good idea? How did you think they were going to make money? The kindness of a corporation?
It was obvious then! Downvote me, argue with me, but any person who thought about it for five minutes should have been able to figure this out.
That’s the point: Nobody thought about it more than five minutes. We were kids, teenagers. We had other stuff in our minds:D As an adult, living in times where stuff like this is reported on a daily basis, well yea now it’s obvious.
Even as a kid I got this. How you didn’t is beyond me. First rule: never real information on the internet.
That’s good for you! I bet you were the weird kid back then.
No it won’t. It will be the veneer. Like preserving the makeup and hair product but not the person it’s painted on.
You can’t actually delete your Facebook account, though. They just mark it as deleted in the database, but can absolutely still use the information.
Is it sure? I’ve done it 15 years ago but I remember clearly there was an option to delete everything. Could it be that it’s only for EU?
I already assume everything I wrote on the Internet is eternal. Of course, data is free and people will use it for stupid stuff like this. This doesn’t surprise me.
Unfortunately, same.
I’ve changed a lot in the years since I started, but I assume all of it is still out there.
I was raised by deep red parents, has the whole homeschool bullshit and everything.
Things were starting to fall apart like 20 years ago, but finally hit a huge breaking point just shy of 10 years ago.
A lot of shit I said back then is probably super bad and cringe. I think I’ve blocked a lot of it out just to preserve some sanity.
But yeah, it’s out there.
This is exactly why I’ve been recording personal logs and saving archives of all of my digital interactions for over a decade already. Going to make one of these for myself at some point using local models.
They laughed, called me mad. Well who’s mad now?
Just having a digital archive of yourself is kind of cool. Future historians (if there are any) will love that, too.
One of my happy imaginings is that perhaps someday my AI simulant will be in a museum somewhere getting to chat with whatever entities descend from us to compare and contrast how things are now with how they are whenever that is.






