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Bluesky/ATProto is a recent example of a self-guaranteeing promise
Used Obsidian (paid for commercial and sync) for years, loved it, and evangelised. Ango and team seem to have genuine integrity.

Am moving to Emacs, org, plus self-built elements, however. With much pain.

You see, what is /not/ self-guaranteeing about a full Obsidian life-organising workflow is the necessary reliance on plugins and their quirky configs. I felt as locked in to the ecosystem as I ever did with services that ‘merely’ used a proprietary storage format.

I know others in the same boat. Obsidian’s long-term legacy may well be primarily as a market-maker for Emacs.

As far as privacy goes, I always say that the best way to ensure privacy, is to not take the information in the first place.

I manage an app that Serves an extremely privacy-focused demographic. I won't use push notifications or PassKeys, because each requires that the server store information that can be linked to a user. We do require a valid email account, and that's it. The email account can be a throwaway, but it needs to be able to receive email. Other than that, the user can choose to do things like mention their location (even then, we "fuzz it," at the server level), and maybe a couple of strings that can be anything they want.

Even with that, I still find that I need to constantly assuage doubts.

I know that not taking information is heresy, hereabouts, but, if I don't have it, it can't be leaked, and I can't be compelled to divulge it.

How would one go about switching away from Dropbox to something else that would be free, private, and macOS/iOS compatible?
Not especially well thought out.

On the one hand, the stainless steel example can be generalized to materials. Gold, for instance.

On the other hand there is plenty of fraud in materials. There are different grades of stainless steel and different methods of production that yield differing qualities.

Maybe “immutable, buyer-verifiable” would be stronger? Once you buy and own and verify the gold you bought, it can’t be retroactively degraded by the seller. But at the time of purchase, it’s not at all a sure thing.

"We will never sell your information!"

Yeah, but whoever buys you or executes your bankruptcy probably will. Much better for you to never have it in the first place.

"You will change your mind, but I won't change mine."

Why I give crap data to everyone unless there is absolutely no other way.

Facebook thinks I live in a ghost town in Utah, and I'm 121 years old.

Also why most of my accounts that want a street address contain an address-line-2 like "JOEBLOW.COM SOLD OUR DATA," so they can't hide.

Piss in the well, y'all.

...and for decades in IT, I was pretty firm on the topic of "just because we CAN collect that data doesn't mean we should." I imagine the DOGE bros who took over my old agency are still living with that.

"We want to know who asked stupid questions in support so we can fire them!"

I saw you coming 30 years in advance, asshole.

I understand keeping applications open to change is for extensibility reasons.

In the privacy case enterprises need to ask for customers consent before changing policies. This includes changing prices too. But usually they take them for granted.