I want to sign up under this instance and host communites, but privacy is important to me.

Privacy drove me off reddit, I looked around for these answers but not sure where to come across them.

1)Am I sharing my IP address/ location with my host instance? 2)is there a log of my view history 3)i know that this instance has a heavy Piracy base, what is the risk of joining this? 4) are there general privacy concerns that I am not thinking of?

I know these may be dumb questions but as a user and not necessarily the most tech savvy, any education would help!

I do not want to be in a position where a Government creates an instance, and allows them to monitor.

  • heartlessevil@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    Check out my comment here: https://lemmy.one/comment/325139

    The relevant parts for you are:

    • The default configuration for Lemmy does log IP addresses through nginx’s access log.
    • The default configuration doesn’t rotate or prune the logs; they are maintained indefinitely.
    • The default configuration doesn’t encrypt the logs (file-level encryption) or disk (block-level encryption.)

    The requests and IPs are therefore vulnerable to:

    • The server admin can check the logs (who can SSH into the server itself, not just an admin on Lemmy)
    • The hosting provider can check the logs (the file is not encrypted and they own the disk they’re stored on)
    • A government can subpoena the server admin or the hosting provider for these logs.

    A Lemmy instance that is concerned about its user’s privacy should either disable access logging, or log to RAM, and ideally encrypt it too.

    However, this raises the issue that you don’t know what software the server is actually running. The above analysis is based on looking at the default configuration of the open source code. But if they were to change the logging to be more secure, you would need to trust them when they say that’s actually the code they are running.

    Have you considered using a VPN like Mullvad or even Tor? Lemmy doesn’t have the same issues with blocking VPNs as reddit does. (Although some fediverse instances, such as Kbin, use Cloudflare, which does its best to block VPNs/Tor.)

    Let me know if you have any other questions.

  • Unruffled [he/him]@lemmy.dbzer0.comM
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    1 year ago

    Thanks for the question and for bringing it to our attention. We are (mostly) all quite new to the Lemmy platform and haven’t yet put together a specific privacy policy for the instance, or looked into customizing the default behaviors regarding logging. For the time being I would suggest you take the usual precautions of using a VPN and following privacy minded practices when creating your account. We will post a sticky about it once we have had time to consider all the ins and outs.

  • koriomenos@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    I am in no position to ask your question because I dont have the technical knowledge about how Lemmy works within, but I can share my perception of what happens in all internet medias: You are only going to see how truthful the platform is when the owners get a court demand or law enforcement at their doors.

    Until this point you can hear a lot of sweet speech of defending freedom, protecting privacy or piracy advocacy, but when the police is involved is where things get problematic.

    • aski3252@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      You are only going to see how truthful the platform is when the owners get a court demand or law enforcement at their doors.

      Wait, so you expect a site admin to openly resist a court order and/or law enforcement when illegal activity takes place? And what does that have to do with “honesty”? There is a reason why servers like this have rules such as “don’t request or link to specific pirated titles”. It’s because they don’t want to get in trouble with the law… And for good reason, they aren’t superman after all, they cannot fight the law…

      And surely we can agree that there are cases where providing law enforcement with information on illegal activity is not only the legal thing to do, but also the moral thing to do.