PeerTube is trying for it - torrent-based decentralized video platform, uses ActivityPub for things like commenting/sharing so you can comment from (for example) Mastodon or Pleroma or Diaspora. The network isn't that big yet but it has potential.
If this list were named "alternatives to Google products" then I'd say it is a good list. But privacy friendly? How so exactly?
There are several closed-source proprietary services on the list, with better (in terms of nearly everything: user base, maturity, feature completeness, ...) open-source alternatives available.
"The SpiderOak desktop backup client is the product of years of a typical startup scramble, and the codebase itself is tightly interwoven with a lot of other moving parts and sensitive information that we cannot release."
Not sure how privacy friendly deepl.com is, but it is so much better than Google Translate, at least for the available language pairs. So if it is more privacy friendly than Google Translate, it must be on the list.
Is Backblaze a Google Drive replacement? I didn't think they had a client/etc.
Isn't Google Drive more akin to Dropbox/etc? Which I know Dropbox has potential privacy concerns, but I don't think Backblaze fits these.. to my understanding at least.
I've been De-Googlfying myself lately as well. I've made a comprehensive list to almost all Google products, which I have screenshotted in the link below:
I support the motive, but it appears to have been hijacked to include companies that don't protect privacy.
Happy to amend this response if creator finds a way to moderate it, but for instance MixPanel stole usernames and passwords earlier this year so definitely shouldn't be on this kind of list https://techcrunch.com/2018/02/05/mixpanel-passwords/
I haven't done due diligence and checked each one, so maybe I'm been overly pessimistic, but some choice entries that I very seriously doubt don't track you: Dailymotion, Wordpress, Dropbox, Skyscanner, Here.com... I could go on. Mapbox for example definitely track you, but do provide an opt-out in their API, so some would describe that as "more" privacy friendly. Others may do similar.
This seems more like a list of alternatives to Google (which is still incredibly valuable), rather than a list of privacy-friendly alternatives.
That's still great though: I'm still happier to have some choice in who tracks me even if all alternatives do.
Authy doesn't delete user accounts, despite claiming to do so upon request in their privacy policy.
"Why do you refuse to delete accounts? It is my data and I want it to be removed. How can I feel safe about my data if I cannot remove it if I choose not to continue using your service."
"Your personal information is generally stored until you advise us to close your Authy account and delete your records, and activity logs may be stored for up to a year for security purposes, or, if there is an ongoing investigation, until that matter is concluded."
I don't appear to have an edit option, I thought comments could be edited.
Thanks for removing MixPanel, I think centralised analytics are by default going to breach privacy as you only need a referer and an IP address to have enough data to put someone's privacy at risk.
Also, third party JavaScript (not protected by code review and SRI) is an access control issue and can violate privacy at anytime as shown by instances of credit card theft and cryptomining this year.
Simply Analytics lies about not being a GDPR concern (which requires consideration for access control and security (loading third party JavaScript) and under GDPR IP address can be considered an identifier.
something that doesnt get enough love is just using something like libreOffice on whatever desktop platform you are on, and then using resilio (or syncthing which is open source) to sync your documents between computers.
I really want to move away from Google Analytics. But I have not found a viable alternative so far. I had settled for Piwik (Now Matomo) but I had to disable it when the server it was hosted on crashed when I received a burst of traffic.
GA gives me some good insights but I can live without it if I have an alternative that can safely handle large traffic on a budget.
There is a hosted version available if you don't want to take care of managing the installation yourself. You can always move to a self-hosted instance later on too, there is no lock-in there.
It would be helpful — and more of a blow to Google — to tell people how to best make sure their computer never accesses any "phantom" Google services such as Analytics.
So the score is just the number of people who voted for it? If so then it probably just means that more people are familiar with DDG than Searx, for instance.
33 comments
[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 81.5 ms ] threadIs there any alternative to Youtube though? I guess it would be video hosting paid by creators, eg Vimeo
https://keepassxc.org/project/
There are several closed-source proprietary services on the list, with better (in terms of nearly everything: user base, maturity, feature completeness, ...) open-source alternatives available.
To name just a few per category:
- Analytics: Matomo (formerly Piwik), Fathom Analytics, OpenWebAnalytics.
- Password managers: passwordstore.org, Keepass
- Cloud storage: NextCloud, TresorIt
"The SpiderOak desktop backup client is the product of years of a typical startup scramble, and the codebase itself is tightly interwoven with a lot of other moving parts and sensitive information that we cannot release."
https://spideroak.support/hc/en-us/articles/115002665263
Isn't Google Drive more akin to Dropbox/etc? Which I know Dropbox has potential privacy concerns, but I don't think Backblaze fits these.. to my understanding at least.
https://my.mixtape.moe/tonyaw.PNG
Replacement column is what I personally am using or plan to switch to when I can
Happy to amend this response if creator finds a way to moderate it, but for instance MixPanel stole usernames and passwords earlier this year so definitely shouldn't be on this kind of list https://techcrunch.com/2018/02/05/mixpanel-passwords/
An alternative for those interested might be https://prism-break.org/en/all/
This seems more like a list of alternatives to Google (which is still incredibly valuable), rather than a list of privacy-friendly alternatives.
That's still great though: I'm still happier to have some choice in who tracks me even if all alternatives do.
"Why do you refuse to delete accounts? It is my data and I want it to be removed. How can I feel safe about my data if I cannot remove it if I choose not to continue using your service."
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9100525
"Your personal information is generally stored until you advise us to close your Authy account and delete your records, and activity logs may be stored for up to a year for security purposes, or, if there is an ongoing investigation, until that matter is concluded."
https://www.twilio.com/legal/privacy/authy
Thanks for removing MixPanel, I think centralised analytics are by default going to breach privacy as you only need a referer and an IP address to have enough data to put someone's privacy at risk.
Also, third party JavaScript (not protected by code review and SRI) is an access control issue and can violate privacy at anytime as shown by instances of credit card theft and cryptomining this year.
Simply Analytics lies about not being a GDPR concern (which requires consideration for access control and security (loading third party JavaScript) and under GDPR IP address can be considered an identifier.
https://hub.docker.com/r/libreoffice/online/ https://github.com/ONLYOFFICE/DocumentServer
GA gives me some good insights but I can live without it if I have an alternative that can safely handle large traffic on a budget.
http://github.com/usefathom/fathom
There is a hosted version available if you don't want to take care of managing the installation yourself. You can always move to a self-hosted instance later on too, there is no lock-in there.