this post was submitted on 16 Jan 2024
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So, blame the victim then?
You know there's another moral equivalence, that a server admin and a company shouldn't be asking for excessive security for recreational uses.
If email verification is not sufficient then they need to look into other methods of securing their servers, the onus is not on the user base to secure the server.
Yes, and unless you haven't noticed spam comments and fake account are rampant across most popular online services.
And yet most people don't care, and just add their phone number to their Discord account without a second thought; because it's not excessive, it's the norm. You can't even make an account on Instagram without providing your phone number, and in some cases and selfie while holding up a security code on a piece of paper to verify you are human. I'm not saying this slow creep into collecting user date should just be hand-waived away by virtue of it's widespread adoption, but the matter of fact is that if it was really viewed as such an egregious breach of privacy by the average person, then it wouldn't have survived since no one would be using the affected services.
You seem to be willfully ignoring the fact that phone number verification is the answer to this question. Real people tend to have one phone number, fake phone numbers are easy to create but cost money, emails do not cost money.
Do you really not see the intrinsic benefit of requiring a phone number as the strictest form of online security for a tragically spam-laden service like Discord?
No, it's definitely an answer for Discord corporate. For the user base, not so much.
The onus is on Discord corporate and the server admins to deal with the problem, not for the user base to surrender their privacy to solve the problem.
Not agreeing with this, but also, ...
And yet all websites seem to still exist, using only email verification.