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Lemmy vs Reddit (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) by SuspciousCarrot78@lemmy.world to c/privacy@lemmy.ml

I think most of us are aware of the shady history of Reddit when it comes to respecting privacy (and if not, here is but one example: https://techcrunch.com/2023/09/28/reddit-is-removing-ability-to-opt-out-of-ad-personalization-based-on-your-activity-on-the-platform/)

I'm wondering what you feel are the pros and cons of Lemmy in this regard?

On the one hand, Lemmy is structurally very different. There’s no single corporate entity building detailed behavioural ad profiles, most instances run minimal (or no) tracking, and you can choose an operator whose logging, retention, and analytics policies align with your risk tolerance.

Hell you can roll your own (yes, with black jack and hookers).

In theory, that alone removes a huge chunk of the surveillance-capitalism model that platforms like Reddit depend on.

On the other hand, your posts, comments, and votes are not confined to one database - they propagate across multiple servers, each with their own admins, logs, and retention practices.

Deletion is best-effort, not guaranteed. You’re effectively trusting a network of operators, not just one. I dunno whether that makes it better or worse.

Any deep thoughts on this conundrum?

PS: I'm leaning towards "don't say anything you wouldn't in a court of law" model these days. If its online - and you don't own the infra - there's always a risk.

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[-] dessalines@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 day ago

Lemmy lets you sign up and use it without a lot of the linked identifiers that reddit requires, that can be tied to your real identity (so they can serve you targeted ads). These include things like IP addresses, your email address, browser or device fingerprint, phone number, etc.

The other privacy concern I can think of, is middle-men capturing passwords and text input, and IP addresses. As long as your server isn't using cloudflare (unfortunately many lemmy servers are), and you aren't using a closed-source app or web UI (unfortunately many users are), you're likely safe.

Of course the other comments are correct that this is a public platform that's distributed, so we have to assume nefarious agencies are scanning it, so you shouldn't say anything that could tie your account to your real identity. Its also probably a good idea to create new accounts every so often if you're the type of person who tends to leak that info.

this post was submitted on 19 Feb 2026
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