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Lemmy vs Reddit (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by SuspciousCarrot78@lemmy.world to c/privacy@lemmy.ml

I think most of us are aware of the shady history of Reddit when it comes to respecting privacy (and if not, here is but one example: https://techcrunch.com/2023/09/28/reddit-is-removing-ability-to-opt-out-of-ad-personalization-based-on-your-activity-on-the-platform/)

I'm wondering what you feel are the pros and cons of Lemmy in this regard?

On the one hand, Lemmy is structurally very different. There’s no single corporate entity building detailed behavioural ad profiles, most instances run minimal (or no) tracking, and you can choose an operator whose logging, retention, and analytics policies align with your risk tolerance.

Hell you can roll your own (yes, with black jack and hookers).

In theory, that alone removes a huge chunk of the surveillance-capitalism model that platforms like Reddit depend on.

On the other hand, your posts, comments, and votes are not confined to one database - they propagate across multiple servers, each with their own admins, logs, and retention practices.

Deletion is best-effort, not guaranteed. You’re effectively trusting a network of operators, not just one. I dunno whether that makes it better or worse.

Any deep thoughts on this conundrum?

PS: I'm leaning towards "don't say anything you wouldn't in a court of law" model these days. If its online - and you don't own the infra - there's always a risk.

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[-] originalucifer@moist.catsweat.com 15 points 1 month ago

reddit is having a conversation is some dudes house. lots of rooms. his house.

lemmy is having a conversation in a large public space where anyone could be listening in. your words are no more retractable than the sound of your voice over an open field or street corner.

the fediverse is an incredibly public place, so im always curious how thats spose to gel with very privacy-conscious users.

[-] SuspciousCarrot78@lemmy.world 5 points 1 month ago

Good analogy.

Yeah, I wonder that too. I think the mindshare Lemmy has (such as it is) comes from being seen as a sort of middle-finger, privacy-respecting, libre alternative.

That positioning clearly attracts a lot of people (myself included). But at the same time, it’s occurred to me that the nature of the Fediverse means you can’t really have true “privacy.”

I can’t speak to what each instance retains (IP logs? metadata?) or how long for - and I assume it varies widely from place to place.

“Bad guy Reddit, good guy Lemmy” may be an oversimplification…or just wishful thinking.

[-] shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip 1 points 1 month ago

There is absolutely no such thing as a private social media. Even if you weren't able to make social media private from a network and technology standpoint, the users would dock themselves unless they immediately generated new accounts for every single post, basically.

[-] CameronDev@programming.dev 2 points 1 month ago

Different bits of data have different levels of privacy. My comments here, public, I have explicitly shouted them out to the world. My home address, private to friends and family. My pornhub history, private to me exclusively.

this post was submitted on 19 Feb 2026
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