this post was submitted on 05 Jul 2023
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Comradeship // Freechat
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Talk about whatever, respecting the rules established by Lemmygrad. Failing to comply with the rules will grant you a few warnings, insisting on breaking them will grant you a beautiful shiny banwall.
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I see that, but I didn't vote on other platforms. I knew I'd be giving data directly to the owners and their five eyes operatives. I know this platform is public, so I'm careful with my words. Now I know I should be careful with voting, too.
The people who want our details are incredibly creative at how to interpret data that seems innocuous.
Edit: that link is very informative, thanks. I should confirm that I assume everything on the internet is public in one way or another and confirm that I don't have any major concerns with the general security architecture of the Lemmy software or the way Lemmygrad is run. I just thought it's something that we should talk about to make sure that we're not increasing the chances of being doxxed by giving away useful metadata.
Edit 2: when I say, 'I don't have any major concerns with the general security architecture', people should know that I'm not qualified to judge this from the coding side of things!
For sure, people definitely should be educated on what data is open (posts/comments), closed (voting on Lemmy as kbin seems to show them publically), "private" (DMs which are explicitly described as not private and to use Matrix etc. for actual encryption), or secure (Matrix). I feel like a lot of us on Lemmygrad are aware of privacy more than the average netizen, but it wouldn't hurt to have a primer for new users.
I think for social media the best thing would just be compartmentalization of identities, so the usual advice of don't give away too much of who you are and keep usernames separate unless you want them to be connected/known.
A pinned post with this information would probably go a long way for new users. I didn't know that until you pointed it here :')
But definitely, being careful with this data can help against brigading and other risks.
A primer would be useful. Especially from someone who knows what their talking about! My knowledge has served me well enough but it's basic.