• 0 Posts
  • 36 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 1st, 2023

help-circle
  • I don’t think that really holds up in a realistic comparison. BEVs are better for the environment. Just not as good as walking, cycling, and mass transit. All of these supply chain analysis commentary about BEVs fail to do an apples to apples lifetime comparison with ICE vehicles. Battery technology and battery recycling will continue to advance as BEV become more mainstream. Battery technology also has significant wider impacts and implications that aren’t strictly limited to vehicles.

    The oil industry alone causes tremendous environmental devastation simply extracting oil - not to mention the transportation problem. Large scale raw material extraction is never pretty no matter what the final product is.







  • The party needs to figure out what they actually stand for and focus on that. The Republicans have distinct factions but the conflicts between those factions are somewhat in the details. The factions in the Democratic party are wildly different and in direct opposition sometimes. The Democratic party has Socialists, Pacifists, and Environmentalist in the same tent as Corporatists and war hawks. Some of these factions just have zero common ground.




  • Why should someone who has doxed someone get away with it by deleting their account?

    Doxxing is not illegal in many places - the US included. Cyberstalking and harassment may be illegal, depending on location. That’s beside the point, but this is an extremely specific example.

    Ultimately users should, in my opinion, be in control of their data. Tildes, for example, preserves deleted comments for (I think) 30 days and then permanently removes them. It seems like that approach is a compromise that would work for your situation while still respecting privacy long term.


  • Deleted comments remain on the server but hidden to non-admins, the username remains visible

    This is a negative behavior by Lemmy, in my opinion. Deleted comments should be purged after some time. Tildes does the same thing - I think with 30 days?

    Deleted account usernames remain visible too

    These should be replaced with some random string of characters or something like DeleteUser<numberhere> or something.

    Anything remains visible on federated servers!

    This is just a concession of federation.

    When you delete your account, media does not get deleted on any server

    This is an issue, too, in my opinion.


  • I don’t think there is a legal requirement that you store that data, just that you make the data you store available, or in some situations, you add logging for valid law enforcement requests.

    Apple for example does not have access to end-to-end iCloud data that is encrypted to my knowledge. They wouldn’t be able to provide the contents of my notes application to law enforcement necessarily - and that is currently legal.








  • It respects your privacy just as much as the alternative, which again, is reddit.

    The alternative isn’t Reddit. It’s Tildes, Lobste.rs, Lemmy forks, etc…

    News aggregation isn’t a binary choice with Reddit on one side. I think if you are saying your software/platform “respects privacy as much as Reddit” that should really be a red or yellow flag. The way Reddit treats user data shouldn’t really be an aspiration.

    If you edit your post, the previous version isn’t saved.

    I haven’t dived into how Lemmy handles edits specifically yet, but my understanding is that a version of the edit is saved into a log. This also brings up the point - if I can edit my post with a period to “delete” it, why doesn’t the delete work that way too?

    You are posting on a public website, you can’t expect that level of privacy, nothing ever gets deleted on the internet.

    I didn’t say I expected it. I said I wanted it. Just because Twitter is terrible for privacy doesn’t mean Lemmy can’t aspire to better than Reddit or Twitter for privacy.


  • No, because lemmy ISN’T PRIVATE FUNDAMENTALLY, it’s a PUBLIC FORUM I do not know what else needs to be said, don’t post public things if you want privacy.

    A public form doesn’t mean it can’t respect privacy. Why even allow delete at all in Lemmy if this is your argument? Make comments immutable. It would be easier to code.

    Lemmy is also aware of your IP address - should it make that information available since it’s a public form? Of course not, that would be absurd. When I click delete the post should be deleted because that aligns with what the user would expect to happen.

    You have no way of knowing what tildes actually does, you just know what the code on github says it does, unless you’re running tildes yourself, you have no way of knowing.

    Yep, but that’s also true for pretty much all Lemmy instances including the one you use - right? You have to place some level of trust in the maintainers and administrators.

    I think the way Tildes handles deleted posts (removed 30 days later) is a benefit when compared to how Lemmy handles deleted posts. I’m fine if the delete isn’t instant.

    This is not a fundamental issue, this is a growing pain, and it’s solved by just linking somebody to an instance instead of explaining all of that, this is opt-in complexity, not a fundamental problem.

    I agree that it isn’t a fundamental issue, but it does seem to be a reoccurring issue in federated software. The process for getting people onto the software tends to be focused on tech savvy people. That’s why a lot of these platforms end up dominated by IT/software developers.

    Yeah, that would be better, or you can just link non-technical users instances and explain none of that.

    That requires ‘recruiting’ someone to a specific instance instead of them finding it on their own. That’s not an organic process. Nobody recruited me into Reddit - I found it myself.

    If I Google Lemmy my top three links are:

    1. Wikipedia entry for Lemmy Kilmister
    2. Join-Lemmy.org
    3. Lemmy Github repo

    None of these are specific instance someone could join. There isn’t a single instance in the first page of results. There are some variations of words that I can use that direct me to lemmy.ml first, but the signup page for that instance literally asks you to go to joinlemmy before signing up.

    We need to improve this process if we want people to continue migrating to federated services.