this post was submitted on 04 Jul 2023
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Privacy Guides

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In the digital age, protecting your personal information might seem like an impossible task. We’re here to help.

This is a community for sharing news about privacy, posting information about cool privacy tools and services, and getting advice about your privacy journey.


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Check out our website at privacyguides.org before asking your questions here. We've tried answering the common questions and recommendations there!

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This community is the "official" Privacy Guides community on Lemmy, which can be verified here. Other "Privacy Guides" communities on other Lemmy servers are not moderated by this team or associated with the website.


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I'll go first with an example below.

What are y'all opinions as to what to self-host (on a computer, instance, or local computer) vs what is better to pay for through subscription or purchase?

The goal is to increase

  • privacy from databrokers, ad brokers, corporate overlords, and from family and friends.
  • security from threats below targeted nation state attacks, below zero-day vulns.

Example:

Self-host your calendar, contacts, and tasks Subscribe to email via protonmail to avoid all the issues with self-hosting mail servers

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[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Self-host

  1. Notes: Joplin server is great, the sync is way more efficient (and private) than using a 3rd party storage service like OneDrive or Dropbox.
  2. Photo Library: Immich photo management server. No clandestine scanning of your images or using them for AI training.

Subscribe

  1. Offsite backup location: Backblaze has super cheap prices on data storage. You can encrypt the buckets with a toggle on BB, but TrueNAS has a sweet automatic backup option that encrypts data before sending to your backblaze bucket.
[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

For backup you can look into rclone. It's what TrueNAS is using. You can set rclone up to only upload your data encrypted to a lot of storage providers like BackBlaze, Google, Dropbox, S3 etc. So you don't have to trust the provider with the ~~privacy~~ confidentiality of your data.