this post was submitted on 27 Jun 2026
9 points (90.9% liked)

Right to be Offline / Offgrid / Analog / Unplugged 🔌📪📖📟📝

175 readers
1 users here now

The developed world is increasingly forcing people to use incompetently designed technology. The #digitalTransformation movement is being forced onto people.

Just like we cannot rely on the public sector to solve the climate crisis, we also cannot rely on the public sector to deploy well-designed privacy-respecting inclusive technology. We always need an analog option.

This community is loosely related to these communities:

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
 

Several years ago BBB’s website became Tor-hostile. This forced privacy-minded people to rely on analog methods for complaint submissions.

Fax was our refuge, until just recently. BBB agencies have been dropping their fax numbers. So we are increasingly forced to resort to snail mail, which is slow and increasingly costly particularly for anyone abroad.

What’s left? I won’t touch Yelp. Fuck those incompetent anti-tor motherfuckers. Yelp cannot be taken seriously with the massive sewer of false reports they publish without regard to credibility.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] debanqued@beehaw.org 0 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

BBB is a scam, they extort companies to pay them to remove stuff basically. Not very helpful for consumer reference if companies can pay for a good profile.

It is true about the extortion-based mud-cleanup shady way of operating. But from a consumer standpoint they still get results often enough. I’ve experienced it 1st hand w/many complaints I’ve filed with different BBB agencies. I’ve experienced roughly an even distribution of these outcomes:

  1. the business confesses, apologizes, and makes the situation right. The complaint pays off 100% (and it costed nothing back when fax numbers worked).
  2. the business responds defensively, refuses to remedy the problem. In some of these cases BBB spanks them with a bad score. In other cases BBB plays the deadbeat and does nothing. Which way it goes depends to a notable extent on the bribe money from the merchant to BBB. Even when the bribe works and the company gets off despite wrongdoing, at least they still have the hidden penalty of paying the bribe.
  3. the business ignores the BBB. This should always be automatic condemnation and an extra poor score. But in reality sometimes BBB is just fucking lazy themselves.
  4. BBB does not even accept the complaint and the merchant is not even contacted. This is the most infurating and unjust scenario. Some BBB agencies are anti-consumer. In principle, this is still not an entire loss because there is a potential shred of justice in going to the press to embarrass the BBB.

Perhaps you have a quite high bar with high expectations. For me, if BBB forces a silent merchant to talk, that’s already sufficient progress to justify the complaint. Communication is half the battle.