• UndercoverUlrikHD@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      How would tracking pixels work via lemmy? I don’t see how you could gain individual ip addresses if the instance simply store the image in their cache.

    • Maalus@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Except you don’t get to ignore GDPR by saying “don’t expect our site to be private”.

      • expr@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        GDPR is really designed to target software controlled by a single entity, but this isn’t that. The instances are responsible for their content, full stop. There’s no way of forcing an instance to delete content, and even if there were, since the admins are running it, there’s nothing stopping them from removing such a feature.

        There’s also nothing stopping admins from deleting content from their servers (it’s just a database, after all).

        • Maalus@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Well then, once the EU knows about Lemmy, it’ll be screwed. Again, you don’t get to make excuses when dealing with GDPR. The book will be thrown at you once you have EU citizen’s data, which lemmy obviously does. Saying “we made this application without it ever being possible to comply with GDPR” will only get you a bigger fine, or worse.

  • deegeese@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    Bit of a red herring to put GDPR in the title when the article is about Lemmy missing key admin functions, and only tangentially how this runs afoul of GDPR.

    TL;DR Lemmy hasn’t implemented image deletion for users or admins, so don’t upload your government ID.

      • morras@jlai.lu
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        1 year ago

        No, Lemmy servers are not exempt from GDPR compliance. The household exemption (you are not subject to gdpr for private activities) only applies for purely personnal activities. As soon as a service is offered to someone else, the exemption is no more applicable.

        That’s one of the drawback about open-source projects, they are designed to fulfill a need (persistent storage & decentralised communication for Lemmy), and no one give a f*ck about legalities.

          • morras@jlai.lu
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            1 year ago

            I’m not so sure about the GDPR status for the Fediverse, I don’t think there’s the law is prepared for “Jerry runs this for people, just for fun”. It’s very much “official organisation” or “money grabbing business” oriented. Someone should fund an actual lawyer to look into this and lay down the real requirements.

            I’m working in the gdpr compiance field ;) Using a personnal device to monitor public space doesn’t fall under the household exception, this solution even pre-dates the GDPR (https://curia.europa.eu/jcms/upload/docs/application/pdf/2014-12/cp140175en.pdf).

            (the case-law is about camera fixed on a private house, but the logic easily translates in a private server grabbing public data).

            but when legal compliance comes up, everybody just sticks their fingers in their ears and pretends not to hear you.

            Just as you did ^^

    • woelkchen@lemmy.worldM
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      1 year ago

      Bit of a red herring to put GDPR in the title when the article is about Lemmy missing key admin functions, and only tangentially how this runs afoul of GDPR.

      I haven’t read the GDPR, yet, but it’s still a serious issue – GDPR or not. Imagine if Instagram did that. Everybody would seriously go bonkers and rightfully so.

      System administrators often aren’t software developers. Lemmy users need to trust Lemmy admins and Lemmy admins need to trust Lemmy developers. Maybe not letting users delete any uploaded media isn’t outright illegal, maybe it is. I’m in the camp of it being definitively not cool.

      • deegeese@sopuli.xyz
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        1 year ago

        Inflicting lawyers on an open source project is a great way to drive off the developers.

        If I hear Lemmy has a GDPR problem I assume it’s lawyer BS only European instance admins have to worry about.

        If I hear Lemmy has bugs in basic CRUD functionality, that’s a real issue.

  • rglullis@communick.news
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    1 year ago

    Not that I hold the Lemmy devs in particular high regard, but unless OP is cutting them a check every month enough to pay their full time salaries, I really don’t think that he should be expecting anything just because he faced an issue that was difficult, but (a) not specific to the developers but the admins of the instance and (b) ultimately solvable.

    I also think that this is not a reason to justify a whole fork or even a fully adversarial position. Yeah, tooling for moderation and instance management is lacking, but these can be built on top of the existing codebase. If my fediverser tool does that for user authentication and account management, it could also be extended for content moderation and provide granular access for staff.

    • woelkchen@lemmy.worldM
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      1 year ago

      a check every month enough to pay their full time salaries

      I would usually agree because often FOSS projects are used commercially but I don’t think this standard doesn’t apply here because the Lemmy instances are also non-commercial projects.

      • rglullis@communick.news
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        1 year ago

        Lemmy instances are also non-commercial projects.

        So why should they be expecting commercial-level support?

        • woelkchen@lemmy.worldM
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          1 year ago

          So why should they be expecting commercial-level support?

          “Users should be able to delete stuff they uploaded” is only something for commercial services?

    • Maalus@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Well, the bare minimum you need to do, is refuse traffic from the EU then. The devs don’t want to do that, but they also don’t want to implement the changes which is illegal and carried huge fines (yes, they can fine you in the US too)

      • rglullis@communick.news
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        1 year ago

        The “huge fines” are proportional to the revenue of the company and there are plenty of legal steps that need to be taken before someone with a big stick gets involved.

        Also, this is not an issue for the developers, but for the admins.

        • Maalus@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          They are also proportional to the size of the leak. Small businesses get some leeway, but the approach that devs have had so far is “we don’t care” when it was brought up.

          It’s an issue for both. If a software you run can get you fined in both the US and the EU, then devs need to adapt or nobody will be using it. Right now, lemmy is too small for big wigs to notice. It takes one disgruntled user to report the breaches though, and everything can change veeeery quickly.

          • rglullis@communick.news
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            1 year ago

            then devs need to adapt or nobody will be using it.

            Or the people that want to use it can hire other developers to add the missing functionality, or develop themselves, or implement some tedious-but-functional process that satisfies the legal requirements, etc, etc.

            My point is:

            • No developer from an open source project should feel responsible for how the software is being used by others
            • No open source developer should feel pressured into working on something just because someone needs it.

            If people don’t like the Lemmy devs and want to use something else that fulfills their needs, fine. But this “I opened a bunch of issues on Github and I demand the developers to work on them ASAP” is really not the way to go.

            • Maalus@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Your point is “don’t make our devs do things that are essential for using it in Europe”

              I wasn’t talking about some issues on github, I was talking about GDPR. If lemmy is to be used in any way, it can’t behave like some student project thrown together from random bits. Legal is part of that. And there is a lot of it to go through. I get it, it’s not fun at all to code that and they’d rather do some cool new feature instead. But it needs to be done, even if nobody wants to do it. Or, at least people could simply accept the risk of it going really bad.

              • rglullis@communick.news
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                1 year ago

                But it needs to be done, even if nobody wants to do it.

                Nobody wants to do it for free. Show some actual support to the developers, let’s help them find a way to let work on something without worrying about how they will keep a roof over their heads, and I can bet that things will start being prioritized accordingly.

                If you want any open source project to be more than “a student project thrown together”, then we need to treat the people working on it as professionals. And how well are these professionals being treated by this “community”, if is not able to collectively pay for one FT developer and where the “CTO” of Mastodon GmbH makes less than what an intern can get at Facebook?

                And since I’m feeling like a rant is brewing inside me, allow me to vent a little: when I mean “developers”, it doesn’t need to be the Lemmy team exactly. As I said in the top comment, my fediverser project already added an “admin” backend that could be used by staff and moderation. it wouldn’t be difficult at all to turn it into a center dashboard for moderation, and it could even be made to have a granular permission system. From the reasonable amount of people that expressed interest, how many do you think actually opened up their wallets to help? Zero

                Back in July when Reddit revealed its true colors, I thought people finally understood the importance of paying for the products they use, so I took the opportunity to pledge 20% of Communick’s profits to the Fediverse projects that I offer. I thought it would be a win-win-win situation: I could acquire customers, users would have expert help to figure out their issues and hopefully even help steering the direction of the project, and developers would have some form of income while not having to deal with a barrage of requests from the non-technical mob. How well do you think that went? Let me tell you: The handful of paying customers that I have are amazing, but they are simply not enough for me to even the server bills.

                It frustrates me to no end when I think of how “anti-capitalistic” people here claim to be, yet I can bet that if we got only the the North American users who have bought an iPhone to pay $1/month, we would probably be able to fund all of the leading fediverse projects and kill Big Tech.

                There, rant over.

                • Maalus@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  Yeaaah, except I don’t care about this platform enough to invest money into it. It has huge flaws, no people, etc. The fact of the matter is though, and I keep repeating this, once it gets noticed, it will be hit by fines. And by that time, it will be a huge scandal, with both admins and devs wishing they actually coded the “uninteresting” parts of the app.

        • bleistift2@feddit.de
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          1 year ago

          The fines are only proportional for big corporations. Organizations without revenue can still be fined:

          Infringements of the following provisions shall, in accordance with paragraph 2, be subject to administrative fines up to 20 000 000 EUR, or in the case of an undertaking, up to 4 % of the total worldwide annual turnover of the preceding financial year, whichever is higher: (a) the basic principles for processing, […] pursuant to Articles […] 7 […];

          https://gdpr-info.eu/art-83-gdpr/

          In this case, the processing of data hinges upon the data subject’s consent, which is detailed in article 7.

          Also, this is not an issue for the developers, but for the admins.

          Imagine a car manufacturer building cars without brakes and then saying ‘This isn’t a problem for the engineers, but for the retailers’. Of course the developers can’t be sued for this. But that’s not the point! The point is that this bug or missing feature or whatever you want to call it jeopardizes the admins upon which this whole ecosystem hinges. I can’t believe that that’s in the devs’ best interests.

    • deegeese@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      Just another guy who thinks he’s Gods gift to open source because he found a bug, and thinks the volunteer developers fail to show proper gratitude by not dropping everything to work on your pet bug.

      • bleistift2@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        To be fair, this is a bug that could be the end of lemmy. As soon as one malicious actor sues even a few instance admins, other will get scared and shut down their instances. As the reporter points out, this isn’t just a shiny feature that’s missing. Instance admins lack the ability to follow data protection requirements that their users have a right to. It’s a lawsuit waiting to happen.

      • Darrell_Winfield@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Interestingly, he was silent for 3 weeks after being assigned to the bug, then came back to post his blog post and nothing else. I’ve seen this blog post a few times today, looks like his self promoting strategy is working.