Post got deleted, posts removed…

    • @BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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      06 months ago

      It does, but it’s a step in the right direction.

      I’m as guilty as anyone for allowing pursuit of perfection be the enemy of good.

      • krolden
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        06 months ago

        How is allowing crypto mining in your browser or hijacking affiliate links good for privacy?

        • @yonder@sh.itjust.works
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          06 months ago

          Brave has a built-in adblocker and is not Chrome. If a user is able to make the switch to Brave, they might find it easier when they try to switch to something better like Librewolf or Firefox.

          • krolden
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            06 months ago

            Why would switching browsers twice make it any easier?

            • @yonder@sh.itjust.works
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              06 months ago

              Because once you learn how to switch browsers once, you already know what the process of changing browsers looks like and what to expect, removing the barriers if you switch again.

              It’s like switching from Windows to Ubuntu. Sure, Ubuntu is not perfect, but by installing Ubuntu, you have already learned the process of installing a linux distro and what to expect if you decide to install a different one.

              • krolden
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                06 months ago

                Except brave doesn’t teach them how to block ads or mine crypto so I still fail to see how if they were to switch to brave it would make their switch to a sane browser less painful. They just have to switch twice instead of once.

      • krolden
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        6 months ago

        No, noobs need to be told what sucks and what doesn’t.

        • Jack Riddle
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          06 months ago

          … so what doesn’t? Just saying <thing> sucks without saying why or providing a valid alternative is not helping anyone. Rather say something like

          “Brave has done some shady things in the past and is based on chromium which is currently doing its best to kneecap adblockers and other privacy tools. If you want a good private browser, you might want to use librewolf instead”.

        • @chloroken@lemmy.ml
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          06 months ago

          Okay, I’ll have a go, since you’re a noob with people and how they actually learn and behave: Your advice sucks.

  • @DollarColonial@lemmy.mlOP
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    06 months ago

    I also got DMs asking why it’s removed or if I got banned, + someone asking and saying in topic it’s the 3rd in short time.

    • @DollarColonial@lemmy.mlOP
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      06 months ago

      Mention VPNs are forbidden due to spam and stuff, GrapheneOS mention forbidden because of drama

      2nd part, community recommend too often just extrem stuff, not seeing that someone just moved away from Google or iOS or whatever big data service

        • @BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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          6 months ago

          At least one of the devs is an arrogant, condescending prick. Remember Nick the Computer Guy from SNL? He’s like 3 times worse than that. I’ve experienced it first hand - as in his second reply to me was to blame me: “you’re doing it wrong”. He’s exactly like some people I worked with 30 years ago. Smh.

          There’s far more than that, though. In general, the Graphene team says everyone else is wrong. Classic idealist attitude.

          I run DivestOS now because of that interaction, I will never use Graphene. That dev can go fuck himself with a pineapple - had enough of his kind of childishness decades ago.

          • @curbstickle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            06 months ago

            Having had a disagreement with Miguel De Icaza that boiled down to him saying “Well I have these books on my shelf so I’m right” (narrator: he wasn’t right, it was hilarious later).

            I will never, ever touch Gnome. I get it.

        • Thordros [he/him, comrade/them]
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          06 months ago

          High level summary: A bunch of nerds got into a slapfight about who’s project is less secure, or who’s project is run by the feds. Some guys got doxxed or swatted, a few stepped away from their projects and left social media, and that’s about where we are today. It’s largely a bunch of clout-chasing nonsense.

      • Sunshine (she/her)
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        06 months ago

        Mention VPNs are forbidden due to spam and stuff, GrapheneOS mention forbidden because of drama

        Defeats the whole purpose of the subreddit, it’s like saying you’re not allowed to talk about yellow in a community about colours…

  • @Matshiro@szmer.info
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    06 months ago

    Tbh I am done with reddit as a whole, back then a lot of mods were power tripping, but now most of them are. You can’t say anything, do anything, it would be better for them if no one would even visit their communities.

    • db0
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      6 months ago

      This is completely unsurprising tbh. A lot of the old mods were enthusiasts who grew a community from scratch due to their love for the subject. In the reddit API shutdown, a lot of those mods left in disgust, or were replaced by the reddit admins, or were driven off by the leftover toxic userbase calling them “entitled jannies” or whatever. A lot of the mods who took over their place were just power-hungry users who were chomping at the bit to get the chance to run a big community as their personal fiefdom because they were too toxic to grow one themselves.

      This is the inevitable culmination of these events.

      Anyway, welcome to lemmy. We become more powerful from every user who writes off reddit forever.

      PS: if you see power-trippin’ behaviour around these parts, you can always post about it in !yepowertrippinbastards@lemmy.dbzer0.com

      • @refalo@programming.dev
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        06 months ago

        To be fair there’s lots of power-tripping mods on lemmy as well, often using their colorful interpretations of subjective rules/terms to suppress opinions they don’t like.

      • @Matshiro@szmer.info
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        06 months ago

        Yeah, that sounds right. Well at least I am happy that I was checking lemmy year ago and now I decided to finally try it.

        Also thanks for advice :D

      • @shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip
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        06 months ago

        I use a repost bot to keep up with the Monero reddit but most of the time I find that I’m not interested enough to actually click the link to go to the original post on reddit and so most of the time I just stay here. I deleted my account during the API issues back in June of 2023 and have not had an account since then and do not plan on going back as I really enjoy it here.

  • @infeeeee@lemm.ee
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    06 months ago

    It was a terrible sub for years much before the apicalypse. It was full of apple fanboys who believed every marketing bullshit.

  • @Samsy@lemmy.ml
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    06 months ago

    Oh I remember r/privacy, this comment is spot on. You expect something like the Linux communities where it is okay what ever you prefer. But privacy-nerds sometimes goes the spying government/tech-firms rabbit-hole to deep.

    • @Rogue@feddit.uk
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      06 months ago

      Can’t Linux communities be just as bad? There’s constant bickering over systemd, snaps, canonical, red hat.

      • Jack Riddle
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        06 months ago

        Yeah, but at least here on lemmy a lot of that doesn’t seem to be very serious and everyone is mostly ok with whatever you use. Don’t know how it was on reddit.

  • @dwindling7373@feddit.it
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    6 months ago

    I like how the original OP mention in passing that Reddit is bad for privacy.

    Like, no shit? How can a privacy community be even remotedly healthy in such an environment?

    It’s like having a club for how to avoid the police within a prison, regulated by the guards.

      • @dwindling7373@feddit.it
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        6 months ago

        I guess we all know it, since we are interested in Privacy and not clueless enough to be on Reddit (anymore?).

        The degeneration from a “safe” place to what it is now is what makes it particoularly egregious a place to avoid for anybody serious about privacy…

        • @infeeeee@lemm.ee
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          6 months ago

          2017 was 7 year ago, Aaron died 11 years ago. There are a lot younger users who can’t remember these things.

          Let’s see a 20 years old university student was 13 when the source was closed down, I think it’s not easy to find a 13 years old who is familiar with such legal things.

          • @kekmacska@lemmy.zip
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            06 months ago

            in 2017 my biggest concerns were that whether i can play PS3 with broken hand or not (i could)

          • @forgotmylastusername@lemmy.ml
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            06 months ago

            Reddit basically has a completely new userbase. It’s not only by age of user. I don’t think people have really appreciated the rate of attrition has been near total. The old userbase of tech savvy STEM college degree holders have effectively abandoned the platform.

            They’ve managed to sell the platform on a whole new set of users. So it looks like the site has kept on plugging along. But really reddit has successfully relaunched itself. Based on the idiosyncratic lingo I see most often. The bulk of users came from Facebook. They don’t know the traditional redditisms so they use vernacular from the platforms they’ve migrated from.

          • @dwindling7373@feddit.it
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            06 months ago

            No but it’s much easier to find the 20 years old student interested in privacy that realyze right now that reddit is not open source…

    • @boonhet@lemm.ee
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      06 months ago

      OP is the original OP. Probably. Reddit poster’s name is the same as the Lemmy poster’s name.

    • @DrDystopia@lemy.lol
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      06 months ago

      Browsing reddit while using a VPN is verboten.

      Good grief I despise that smug, winking snoo with a effing fedora that goes along with the error page.

      • Cousin Mose
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        06 months ago

        I could’ve written a Tailscale App Connector to route it through the home connection, but I ended up blocking their domains outright and writing some CSS rules to hide Reddit from SearXNG results. It’s better than that annoying page.

      • ohellidk
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        06 months ago

        yeah, seems like they really don’t want site visits or something! oh well, its cooler here.

          • @Infynis@midwest.social
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            06 months ago

            A lot of reddit’s most popular content is stuff like TrueOffMyChest from throwaway accounts. Robust privacy protection would result in more of those posts, and more traffic overall, but reddit doesn’t care about making the site work, they’ve dedicated themselves to milking the individual users for all they’re worth. It’s a bit like killing the goose that lays the golden eggs. Because look, now we’re all here, generating content on a competing platform

    • @steal_your_face@lemmy.ml
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      6 months ago

      While I hate Reddit isn’t the fediverse basically horrible for privacy? It’s super easy to see everyone’s posts and IP addresses no? I thought anyone could basically download everything with very little effort and do whatever they want with it.

    • @notprogrammer@programming.dev
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      6 months ago

      If you only talk about privacy on already private platforms, it will become a circlejerk in no time. You need to tell people who have no interest/experience in online privacy about it so you can further the cause. This is similar to why the FSF is on Twitter/X.

      • @dwindling7373@feddit.it
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        06 months ago

        I guess having something in there is good but it’s inherently an issue when the topic at hand is acting outside survelliance.

        Let’s say, for example, things escalate and reddit get fully weaponized for the benefit of one side, and they start pushing for known compromised VPNs. How can you fight that if pepole got into the habit of trusting such platform?

        • @notprogrammer@programming.dev
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          06 months ago

          You tell them Reddit is not trustworthy and they should move out, of course. I am not denying that. I am saying the r/privacy community should not be dead because Reddit is a popular platform whether you like it or not, and people need to be informed about their right to privacy even on a known hostile platform.

  • @DaseinPickle@leminal.space
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    06 months ago

    Nerdy communities always seem to attract some very opinionated people, which is a turn off for people just trying to do better.

    • @refalo@programming.dev
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      6 months ago

      I will go one step further and say 1. most strong opinions are not based on deep knowledge, and 2. a lot of this drama is legitimate mental illness… a niche of a niche that by design is run by extremely paranoid people, often aren’t all there in the head, or you could say they have simply crossed over the fine line of genius.

    • @Batadon@lemm.ee
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      06 months ago

      I don’t think OP was trying to say Proton Mail is bad or insecure. Rather the opposite.

    • _cryptagion [he/him]
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      06 months ago

      They gave meta information like IP to the government in Switzerland, where they are based, after the government forced them to with a court order. Not the encrypted mail, mind you, because they can’t do that, just the additional information they have on a user like email and IP.

      Because of that, a lot of redditers on r/privacy think they spy on their users for the US government. It’s a stretch, yes, but you have to remember they take turns using the one brain they collectively have.

      • @EngineerGaming@feddit.nl
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        06 months ago

        I guess the issue here is overselling the safety of the service. Wouldn’t rely on them encrypting the mail for you, for example. It’s probably fine if you treat it just like you would any other email service - assuming you’re fine with being unable to use a mail client at all on the free plan and using it in a weird roundabout way on the paid plans.

        • @ReversalHatchery@beehaw.org
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          06 months ago

          the issue is that they can’t defy the law without shutting down and going into jail. proton has given the tool the activist would have needed to protect themselves: the service has an official onion site, which would have made IP collection impossible, and they could have just said they can’t know it

          • @EngineerGaming@feddit.nl
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            6 months ago

            Yes, that was exactly my point. You would not treat any mail service like they would cover you during your unprotected use, and Proton is not an exception. So I don’t understand why people are taking issue with them cooperating with LE - but I take issue with some other qualities.

            • @ReversalHatchery@beehaw.org
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              06 months ago

              So I don’t understand why people are taking issue with them cooperating with LE

              some believe they (proton) are invincible and can do whatever they want. maybe because they think that’s what swiss privacy and swiss laws mean

      • @AnAmericanPotato@programming.dev
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        06 months ago

        Not the encrypted mail, mind you, because they can’t do that

        Just want to point out for anyone new that ProtonMail does not use E2EE for email headers. That means they CAN access your subject lines, to/from fields, and other email headers. That means they CAN be forced to hand it over to the government.

        Source: https://proton.me/support/proton-mail-encryption-explained

        Subject lines and recipient/sender email addresses are encrypted but not end-to-end encrypted.

        Personally I am disappointed in a lot of Proton’s wording about this. They frequently promise they can’t access “your data” and “your messages” when they do, in fact, store potentially sensitive data in a format they CAN access.

        • _cryptagion [he/him]
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          6 months ago

          A bit more context is important here. They aren’t E2EE, but they are stored encrypted. In the case of the person whose meta information was turned over, ProtonMail wasn’t forced to hand over the information right away, they were forced to collect it the next time that person accessed and used their email. That tells us that they didn’t store the information beforehand and could not access it without preparing to intercept it the next time their service was used.

          Ultimately, though, if something like that’s a dealbreaker, it’s likely you’re doing something that would benefit from a more secure way of communicating than email.

        • @jherazob@beehaw.org
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          06 months ago

          It’s email, that’s the best you can get with email, if you want to have more privacy, DON’T USE EMAIL

          • @AnAmericanPotato@programming.dev
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            06 months ago

            This is good advice, because email is very difficult to make reliably private. However, it’s not the best you can get. Tutanota, for example, stores headers with E2EE, and still has a search function.

            The goal should be to make it as private as it can realistically be. Ideally, any cloud service you use should only store end-to-end encrypted data.

            I’m not trying to shit on Proton — it’s a huge step up from the popular mainstream email services, and the inclusion of cloud storage makes it a much easier transition than going piecemeal with 2-5 different services.

      • SeekPie
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        06 months ago

        If all they have on you is your optional backup email and your IP, I think they’re doing pretty well in the no data-collecting part?

        • _cryptagion [he/him]
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          06 months ago

          Well, you don’t even need to provide an email or phone number when you sign up, so if you access the site via their onion address every time, they would have no information on you at all.

      • @Sundial@lemm.ee
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        06 months ago

        Yeah I agree, sounds a bit excessive. If that’s correct, it doesn’t sound like they’re reading your data and at the end of the day they have to comply with things like warrants. Thanks for the clarification.

        • @underwire212@lemm.ee
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          06 months ago

          It is all also very clearly stated in the information they must collect in order to provide their service. There should’ve been no surprises here, as you must assume that scenarios like these will happen eventually.

    • drkt
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      06 months ago

      Privacy wise? Probably nothing. The company engages in shitty behavior, though, and will try to upsell you even if you’re a paying costumer. I switched to Tuta because of that, and then Tuta started doing all the same bs…

  • The_sleepy_woke_dialectic [he/him]
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    06 months ago

    The “little steps” idea, though helpful in other places, doesn’t really apply under surveillance capitalism. If one company gets some small bit of info about you they will sell that data to everyone else, and the government has access to those data as well. Being a little safer sometimes doesn’t do much. You really have to go all the way or don’t bother

  • @SocialMediaRefugee@lemmy.ml
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    06 months ago

    “Welcome to Reddit! A community where you can determine what the mood and biases of the mod(s) are so you can safely post without getting banned or comments deleted.”

  • Hellmo_luciferrari
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    06 months ago

    I ditched reddit, and what’s being described in this thread is largely part if why I left. I won’t go back.

  • Claudia
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    06 months ago

    The real privacy nerds: paying for a service? Leaving a paper trail? Learn how to pwn grandma computers and push all your internet through that. /s