

This is the core issue. Remote attestation fundamentally breaks user agency. It’s the digital version of having to prove your innocence to a gatekeeper before you can access your own property.
The consortium model is progress over the Google-only status quo. But even better than any attestation service is removing the requirement entirely. Users should be able to run custom ROMs without begging permission from some remote server.
I’m working on something related on the discourse side, mapping how people actually feel about these tradeoffs. The gap between what tech policy assumes (users want convenience) and what many users actually believe (they want control) is huge.
Open source alternatives matter. They matter even more if they actually work.


The real issue here isn’t just about “poisoning” their data. It’s that people don’t actually know how their contributions get scraped and repurposed.
I’m working on something called The Zeitgeist Experiment that maps public opinion by having people respond to questions via email, then using AI to rank responses and synthesize key ideas. The goal is transparency about how AI processes human input—showing people what actually gets used, not hiding it in some TOS.
GitHub’s new policy will make things worse. Users will be even less aware their code is going into models they never agreed to train on. The default should be opt-in, not opt-out after the fact.