• @[email protected]
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    1 month ago

    Oh no, won’t someone think of the email addresses?!

    Guys. IP addresses, and email addresses…aren’t really private things.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 month ago

        Not really. Hasn’t been since the beginning of email addresses. Because email addresses aren’t required to link to a personal identity. They’re just email addresses.

        Until the day an email address require personal identification, it’s not something you need to protect as private information.

        • @[email protected]
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          121 month ago

          Emails are personal data and are not allowed to be shown without specifically opting in for it. In Europe at least. Same for IP. This is also why when you “Recover Password” it will say something like “if this email address is found we’ll send you a mail”. So nobody can just check if an email exists on the service.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 month ago

            That has less to do with customer privacy and more to do with competitors exfiltrating your email lists. They aren’t doing it out of the goodness of their hearts.

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          21 month ago

          Depends on your personal acceptable levels of spam in your inbox, I suppose. Thus the common “junk email” and “good email I actually use” scheme many people today rely on. One of those emails I’ll give out, the other is a closely guarded secret only available to a select few. I actually have a middle ground too of “not junk, but I don’t know these people IRL,” too.

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          11 month ago

          It’s hard to find an email service that doesn’t ask for a phone number now a days. Even shit ass Proton mail does it now

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        41 month ago

        Funny because of the “not a paywall” on the article which the intent is to force the user into providing their email address to read the entire article.

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          21 month ago

          Idk, being that “that’s so they can sell your email,” I’m inclined to argue that it is a paywall, the currency is just “email” not “USD.”

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          1 month ago

          The entire point of a web browser is to allow scum to:

          • endlessly throw loginwalls and paywalls at us

          • load dodgy third party sites libraries

          • insisting on kyc as an act to show and display continuous acts of compliance

          So not surprising the linked site has either a login or paywall.

          Forcing a phone number is kyc. kyc is obnoxious.