I’ve just come from the reddit exodus and I’m looking around for some documentation or info on the privacy & security on infosec.pub and/or lemmy as a platform - how our logins are stored and whether data is accessible by developers / other parties.
Does anyone know where I can find more information on this? (Or if not could you shed some light)
This platform seems incredibly promising and I’m sick of reddit’s ways now, but i want to read up before I fully commit. Many thanks!
(Edit - sorry if this isn’t an appropriate place for this by the way, just seemed a sensible community to put it in!)
This is a part of @jerry@infosec.pub’s InfoSec World. You can see more about the admin, services, and rules at: https://infosec.exchange/about
This lemmy instance is still being built so all of the nice about pages and are still being worked on.
That’s right. The weekend got away from me. I’ll be fill it out soon.
Best way to describe it is that it’s like email for message boards. You can use different servers, or even run your own, but they all can talk to each other.
You can use something like this to find communities overall
Let’s say you want to connect to the largest community there, but it’s on beehaw. You can then search it or you can go straight to it
https://infosec.pub/c/technology@beehaw.org
If you want to search for communities you can do that in search as well. But again it’s buggy.
So cool. This post helped me figure out how to get in touch with other communities in other instances. I thought I’d have to create accounts for each instance. So thank you :)
as far as i know, there’s not a lot of official Lemmy documentation, but chances are your instance admin will be able to help you out with that. maybe search for a “meta” community in your instance
Use Signal, use Tor, as they say.
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It’s amusing to me that the first entry is “Don’t trust any server you don’t own” and then people dog pile on supportive remarks on servers that they don’t own. :-)
To be fair, I don’t trust infosec.pub, reddit.com, or any of those servers. I just choose what I’m going to publish using them with that model in mind.
I think the whole “ActivityPub makes it impossible to really delete things” is a whole nothingburger anyway. If you post something to a public website, like it or not, there’s no way to delete it with certainty. The internet never forgets.
I try to make sure that I don’t need to trust them so I can enjoy them for what they are intended for public communication.
Sure, ActivityPub makes is impossible to delete things, so does the Blockchain, or Usenet, or eyeballs that have processed something.