whats the problem with it . you did not liked it you downvoted . its not like they can ban your account
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If you're an instance admin, for any post, you can just click "view votes" and see everything tied to usernames, even outside your own instance. Moderators can too, but it's restricted to the communities they moderate.
So if a bad actor wanted to get aces to vote data, they could setup and instance and have it federate with any instance they want to extract voting data from?
The IP address thing is not real, though
Just choose a nickname that is random word+4 random digits and don't reuse it on other services
This is the way. Randomise your usernames and use a password manager to keep track of them.
Sir, this is the Fediverse.
It is nowhere explicitly made clear to users that voting is public. It should be made clear if it is going to be
An EU resident could sue for emotional damages under the GDPR. Or maybe just complain to data protection authorities.
One day it will happen.
It's the other way around here: Everything is public except where it's made clear that it won't be (e.g. email address, password).
For what it's worth, your instance of choice is particularly negligent in regard to informing its users. Compare lemmy.today/legal to lemmy.world/legal, or their respective signup pages for examples. There's little that Lemmy itself or the community at large can do about that 😞
Are you sure about that? Reddit is a fucking cesspool.
In combination with your IP, this is a massive privacy (maybe even physical security) risk. Also, people can target you for your votes.
No.
It would be unusual to be able to exactly identify someone purely from their IP, but let's say someone posted from their work IP in a small company. It would substantially lower the bar to dox them.
Let's go further and ponder if an authoritarian regime setup an admin and started coorelating dissent ip's collected from user when they did things like paying parking fines, or signing their online tax forms.
Let's say that they collected all that and trained an LLM on it, then when you go to get a passport renewed or are stopped for a traffic violation and ask the LLM if you're a dangerous person based on their criteria.
It's not a direct problem, but it has slippery slope all over it.
this is why i vote at random, like two-face doing his quarter thing
You get 3 accounts. Say you want to upvote something. You downvote in 1 account (randomly selected), upvote on another, and upvote on the third. So it’s net +1 and the only way to see how you voted is to piece together all 3 of your accounts voting history. Need more privacy? No problem, just use 5 accounts instead of 3.
/s
wait, so what do i do with the first shell again?
Seems like a good thing to me. Should be a better known feature.
How would I go about seeing this information for myself?
Yeah, at worst it’s a necessary evil to prevent a rogue user on a second instance from mass downvoting. Your username is tied to your vote, because otherwise a rogue user could just spam downvotes at whatever they didn’t like.
Instance 1 has a post. Instance 2 has a user who disagrees with that post. User is able to spam downvotes, because instance 2 is not binding their username to the vote. So Instance 1 has no way of knowing if the votes are multiple different users, or all one user. The only real solution here is to disable external voting, but the entire point of the fediverse is cross-compatibility and self-hosting. By binding the username to the vote, instance 1 is able to detect repeat votes and disregard them.
Important to note here, too, is that ip addresses of users arent synced across instances.
This is only a problem for people who care about the reputation of their user account - which is something people should be rotating out anyway if they care about their privacy.
Why is public voting a massive privacy and physical threat but public posting and commenting is not?
Why are you saying IP addresses are publicly shown here and why is (almost) no one correcting you? That would've been an enormous privacy risk that would've required intentionally fucking users over. Just doesn't even make sense to write what you did about IP addresses. Seems like you're just hoping to cause some panic.
Russia really should just leave Ukraine, though. (Sorry, I just saw the context for this a few minutes ago and can't help myself).