Subject: 🧠Asking Questions Isn’t a Crime – My Experience on MacRumors
Hello folks!
I want to share something that recently happened on the MacRumors forums
— and why it matters to anyone who values open technical discussion.
I posted in a thread about EtreCheckPro (
https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/etrecheckpro-process-redacted.2291964) under the name BRAWDY14 — a nod to my flying days at RNAS Brawdy in
Wales, where I did my advanced fast-jet training.
In that thread, I raised some genuinely polite and technical concerns:
Why does EtreCheckPro redact some process data from its own reports?
What kind of data does it collect, and where does it go?
Why is developer support nonexistent, even for paying users?
Should we blindly trust endorsements — even from respected voices
like Howard Oakley?
I didn’t insult anyone. I wasn’t trolling. I just asked questions that anyone concerned with software transparency would ask.
And I was banned.
Apparently, on MacRumors, it’s acceptable to discuss what EtreCheck
detects — but not acceptable to discuss EtreCheck itself.
The irony? EtreCheck is sold as a diagnostic tool to bring hidden
problems to light. But when you try to shed light on the tool itself — silence. Censorship. Ejection.
That’s not how we do things on ACW. Here, we ask questions. We dig.
We’re allowed to be skeptical — even encouraged to be.
So I say to you all:
Question the tools you use.
Don’t be swayed by community groupthink.
And if asking questions gets you banned — you’re probably onto something.
Let’s keep Usenet the open ground it’s always been.
--
David Brooks
(BoaterDave, a.k.a. BRAWDY14)
RNAS Brawdy, back then. ACW, right now!
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