NixNet/privacy-policy.md

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page Privacy Policy I encourage you to read the whole document. It's not particularly long or difficult to understand. What's being done with your data? /privacy/ /assets/posts/privacy.png

Privacy Policy

This will hopefully be the briefest "legal" document you've ever read as well as the most readable. If you need additional information let me know and I'll add it.

IP Address

Some applications (Gitea, Mastodon, Mumble, XMPP) collect your IP when you register. At the moment, that information is kept indefinitely. However, I'm working on either completely disabling it or setting something up that will periodically delete stored IP addresses. When I do, this document will be updated accordingly.

If you don't want me to have that information to begin with, just use Tor Browser.

Email Address

When you register for a service using an email address, that is obviously collected. You can control whether it's a real one or not. Even though I can see them for services like Gitea and Mastodon, I don't care and won't send you unsolicited mail.

Note: whatever address you use for git is visible in commits.

Browser Fingerprint

Your web browser communicates uniquely identifying information to all websites it visits by allowing the site to know details about your operating system, browser information, plugins installed, fonts installed, screen resolution, and much more. I don't care about that either and, if some services do collect that for their own use (I'm 99% sure none of them do), I'm not going to look at it ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Usage and storage of collected information

For most services: Whatever data is collected is stored on one server in Germany and won't be shared with any third parties whatsoever.

For Nextcloud: Whatever data is collected is stored on one server in my living room and won't be shared with any third parties either. User's files are encrypted at rest so no one can hack into my server and steal them. I do have the encryption key so I could decrypt and view your files. I'm not going to bother with that though because I don't have any interest in looking at your personal stuff. That's your business and I won't invade your privacy.

Exceptions

I do live in the US; one server is here and the other is in Germany. If, for whatever reason, I'm compelled by law enforcement to give up your email, IP address, or any other information, I will. I don't want to. As such, I do whatever I can to make sure I don't have that information. If I don't have it, I can't share it.

Recommendations

To mitigate invasions of privacy like this, use a throwaway email address for registration, such as one from cock.li, or ProtonMail, provide a fake name, and use the service from behind Tor or a VPN. Rather than a VPN, however, I strongly recommend using Tor across all devices. They have an Android version now and there's another browser for iOS that they recommend called Onion Browser. I don't use iOS so I can't say whether or not it's any good, just that the Tor Project recommends it below the Android section.