Found this off a protonmail email
=> Governments spying via push notifications (Reuters)
=> Posted in: s/privacy | ๐ gritty
2024-01-21 ยท 1 year ago ยท ๐ zinricky, skf, ElectricalDance, gamma
=> ๐ค gamma ยท 2024-01-21 at 16:07:
I remember in the early days of Android when apps had to implement their own notification system. I had a number of apps that used polling, and I'm sure it drained the battery life somewhat, but it wasn't a complete battery killer as some suggest. I was always suspicious of this push to centralize it all...
=> ๐ satch ยท 2024-01-21 at 18:35:
Old news, but the more this is publicly admitted and out in the open the better.
=> ๐ ElectricalDance ยท 2024-01-21 at 22:06:
This is why privacy focused apps like Signal or Proton while using the centralized push system, they will send the minimal amount of data required. The only usefull information is you got a notification from this app.
The app itself then check and display the message. I would also recommend to anyone serious about privacy to just disable sensitive data in notification. This not only reduce further the amount of data collected but also improve your digitial well-being.
=> ๐ stack ยท 2024-01-21 at 22:44:
I think it is reasonable to assume that several primary parties are collecting your data at all times, and secondary parties intercept or raid the collected data at least occasionally.
=> โ๏ธ dce ยท 2024-01-21 at 23:03:
There are a couple of apps that use their own systems, such as Signal and Proton Mail, and you can use OpenPush if you have an Android.
There's also a Lemmy client, Arctic, on iOS that uses its own push servers, but it's proprietary.
=> ๐ gritty [OP] ยท 2024-01-22 at 00:31:
@hellfire interesting. it seems openpush isn't being developed anymore.
=> โ link
=> โ๏ธ dce ยท 2024-01-22 at 23:21:
@gritty Aw, seriously? Damn.
text/gemini; charset=utf-8
This content has been proxied by September (ba2dc).