I asked a relative to look for RealVNC on the Play Store and install it. Once they were done, I asked them to fulfill a basic task inside RealVNC and they were really confused by my instructions. I took a look at their phone, lo and behold, they had installed a different app. I asked them to repeat the install procedure while I watched. They punched in “realvnc” in the search box, two identically formatted results appeared. Their finger instinctively clicked the Install button on the top result. It was an ad. 🤦‍♂️🤦‍♀️🤦

  • @deafboy
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    8129 days ago

    Pffft, the young generation, not hardened by the 6 different download buttons on a torrent search engine… /s

    • @[email protected]
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      28 days ago

      This, but unironically. How can you be so blind to click on something called Zoho, when RealVNC (the thing you searched for) is right below it?

        • @Yprum
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          528 days ago

          Google being evil and assholes doesn’t remove the fact that this person literally didn’t spend a second to check what they clicked.

          Digital safety starts with everyone, despite if we need laws to regulate the asshole companies trying to mess with people’s lack of attention.

          • NickwithaC
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            026 days ago

            They didn’t click anything. This is just a post about the annoyance of ads.

            • @Yprum
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              126 days ago

              They clicked the install button of an ad, that’s the whole point, what a weird specific detail to get hung up on anyway even if you were not wrong (which you are). It’s not just an annoying ad, it’s an ad hidden as actual results of a search with an identical install button. Google is to blame for that style to clearly try and cheat people and they deserve all the backlash and fines and more for it. But clicking a button that says install without checking what it belongs to is beyond ignoring any basic security, it’s simply stupid, and that’s on the user, not on google.