danieljackson

joined 1 year ago
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[–] danieljackson 7 points 1 year ago (2 children)

As I said in another comment, the GDPR protects people. And the GDPR only applies to personnaly identifiable data (IPs, email addresses, street address, legal name, date of birh...) Lemmy only collect emails and IPs, and do not share them between instances. So it's very easy to comply to the GDPR as long as you don't do anything shady.

The EU has a marketing issue. They tried to pass legislation to prevent companies to collect data. But instead, company displayed a popup, kept collecting data, and blamed it on the EU. Everytime I see a popup, I blame ruthless data collection.

Actually, Lemmy is most likely violatiing the California Consumer Privacy Act, which, as opposed to the GPDR, gives the right to update/delete any data generated by the user, not only personally identifiable information.

[–] danieljackson 37 points 1 year ago (2 children)

The GDPR doesn't apply only to services hosted in the EU, but any services handling the data of an EU citizen.

This is why some news outlets in the US just decided to block EU users all together, out of laziness.

IANAL, but the GDPR doesn't cover pseudonymous data. Actually the GDPR encourages data processors (= services) to use pseudomization.

Personally identifiable information are IPs, email addresses, street address, name, date of birth, ... Lemmy only collect IPs and email addresses. And these are not shared between instances.

Whether the service is hosted in the EU or not, as long as it serves EU users, lemmy should provide a way to delete emails and ip information in a self serving way. (maybe by deleting the account) In the mean time, instances admins have to fulfil requests to delete emails/ips of EU citizens from the database.

[–] danieljackson 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Can you click on the icon? What does it says? I'm not aware of any javascript API to "force" notifications.

[–] danieljackson 6 points 1 year ago

As the article says, I'm not denying that Purism has contributed greatly to the fully OSS Linux mobile ecosystem. But it's not like they're the only one, and they're relying on a lot of other people's work as well.

But this is becoming more and more outrageous in terms of price/quality.

[–] danieljackson 17 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Unfortunately, reclaimthenet.org has become more and more click-baity in their headlines...

This is what he said (from the reclaimthenet.org article):

“We’ve seen them; Snapchat, TikTok and several others, serve as places where violent gatherings have been organized, but there’s also a form of mimicry of the violence which for some young people leads them to lose touch with reality.

“You get the impression that for some of them they are experiencing on the street the video games that have intoxicated them,” he added.

(This is the source in French: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHpqbo7p38Y )

The ministers have been complaining about a "gamification" of the riots, where protesters push each other to destroy more stuff through social media. And that's what he was condemning.

I'm not aware of him having requested deletions of riot content. That would, indeed, by worrying for a western democracy... But France civil liberties have been on the downward-trend since the 2015 Paris attacks. So I could see this happening. But data to social media companies have been requested, which is IMHO not alarming, but always makes me uneasy...

[–] danieljackson 26 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Reminds me of this tweet:

[–] danieljackson 3 points 1 year ago

That's not what he said, or even implied. He said that there was a gamification of riots. https://lemmy.world/comment/697309

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