I saw a comment somewhere saying the title and had links but I lost the comment now. One of the links was going to raddle.me which is a Reddit like site

  • Korgen
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    211 year ago

    The political views of the main devs are controversial but it doesn’t really matter since Lemmy is free and open source. No one owns or runs it. Only lemmy.ml specifically is run by the devs.

      • Drew Got No Clue
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        111 year ago

        I don’t understand this question. This is a public platform, there are no secret messages or info. What do you mean by privacy? Hide what from whom?

        • @[email protected]OP
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          21 year ago

          Look at my other comment with the link. It’s saying that even if you delete your account the only thing that happens is that you can’t access it anymore but every comment and data is still in the database

          • Drew Got No Clue
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            181 year ago

            What about The Internet Archive? Search engines cache? Copies made by other people? etc.

            This is a public platform; don’t share things you don’t want to be shared. You can’t truly expect anything being deleted forever everywhere.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              I mean, we can absolutely want that. And data farming is bad. Just objectively. Having a conversation in a public area irl isn’t consent to being recorded (not that it is always illegal to do so). And Why should it be on the internet? If the delete option doesn’t actually delete anything, it should clearly reflect that. I have no idea why you would argue against user control of their data.

                • @[email protected]
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                  1 year ago

                  But we can, its the internet. Why shouldn’t we be able to delete things? I’m not a ceo, I’m not a politician. The world has no vested interest in preserving a post i make. I should have control of my data. I seriously cannot fathom how anyone could possibly argue otherwise. I’m an ordinary civilian, and my data should belong to me and I should be able to have it deleted if I so choose. Note that every single massive social media platform essentially by law has to provide you means to do this. Lemmy should not be exempt from this. Whats the point of leaving reddit to join another platform that doesn’t respect its user base? It’s nonsense.

                  And I never said it was illegal (I specified the opposite actually), but its obviously wrong to walk up to 2 people sitting on a park bench having a quiet conversation between the two of them and record it without even asking them.

          • @LlamaSutra
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            111 year ago

            This is how every website on the internet works. It’s why they say everything is permanent on the internet.

            • samick1
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              41 year ago

              Some companies have to enforce retention policies for business and/or legal reasons, which means they actually have to delete your data if they say they will.

              Some sites only “soft” delete things because it’s simply easier and cheaper.

              Regardless, I can’t reiterate what you said enough:

              It’s why they say everything is permanent on the internet.

              Nobody should ever once in their life assume that data they post online will be discarded, ever. Maybe it will, but never assume it will. Even if you run the server yourself and delete the data files on your server and send the hard disks into the sun, if the data was ever accessed, you should treat it as if it’s been captured and retained somewhere.

              • @LlamaSutra
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                11 year ago

                True about the retention periods but I don’t have a whole lot of trust when it comes to other companies keeping my data so I always assume everything is permanent and backed up somewhere.

          • nobug-404
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            111 months ago

            If you don’t want it there don’t post it. The internet is scraped and copied and backed up. You can ask for it to be deleted but the company likely doesn’t own every copy.

          • @[email protected]
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            01 year ago

            Okay but you’re commenting on a public forum, and didn’t give anyone your name or any other PII when you signed up? Why are you worried about not being able to delete the things you’re posting anonymously anyway?

            • @[email protected]OP
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              11 year ago

              I never said I was worried. It’s just the general idea when actual companies usually have a data deletion policy in place. Having a data retention policy in place is usually a good look

              • borari
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                21 year ago

                There’s no corporation or company in the mix here.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Let’s put it this way:

        Spez, reddit’s ceo, used to mod r/jailbait. Did it matter to the users? It didn’t. Why should this be any different?

        Also, this is a public platform as much as reddit is. Reddit’s TOS is horrible and yet people stayed. Lemmy is not worse than reddit in terms of privacy. I had to use a script/program before deleting my reddit accounts because reddit won’t delete what’s in there.

  • @[email protected]
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    171 year ago

    I haven’t seen that accusation. There are some communists but no Nazis that I’ve seen. And I’ll take a communist over a Nazi 200% of the time.

    • @LlamaSutra
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      101 year ago

      It isn’t run by them since the platform is open source. They run Lemmy.ml but other instances are free of their influence.

      • @[email protected]
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        51 year ago

        They also run the project, unless someone is going to fork it. I’m not suggesting anybody does or being critical at all though.

        • @LlamaSutra
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          11 year ago

          Since all the other instances are ran independently, what can they realistically do? Pull everything off GitHub and just delete everything?

  • @[email protected]
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    101 year ago

    Another conservation I had recently said that lemmygrad is apparently run by communists and harbor tankies. If I had to venture a guess, whoever wrote what you saw doesn’t understand the difference between nazis and communists, and that’s where it’s coming from. Or maybe there’s also a nazi instance here somewhere, but as long as you’re not part of their instance or an instance that federated with them, you won’t see any of that shit

  • Drew Got No Clue
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    1 year ago

    See one of the two devs’ essays here for his political views: https://github.com/dessalines/essays

    Having said that, you’re free to join a different instance (like the one I’m commenting from), if you have issues with that. I haven’t personally noticed anything actually problematic though.

    Edit: quick answer -> definitely not neo-nazis, and probably not relevant either

  • @[email protected]
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    21 year ago

    As others have said, so what? It’s decentralized platform. If you don’t want to interact with them, then don’t. Nobody runs lemmy. It’s a collection of instances communicating with each other. That is the beauty of it.

  • Ghostalmedia
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    11 year ago

    Apparently “a few” essays on communism is thousands of links and articles.