Permanently Deleted

  • unperson [he/him]
    ·
    edit-2
    4 years ago

    It's mostly justified through features, but the Discord desktop program has access to:

    • Everything you type, even when the window is minimised
    • The contents of your screen
    • Your camera
    • Your microphone
    • The list of programs you're running, which it sends to their servers every few minutes
    • Your documents
    • Your IP address

    Which could up to a point be tolerated, if it wasn't that Discord is part of the MUSCULAR programme of the NSA and Discord's (non-EU) privacy policy explicitly states they can send any and all information to their "partners" which may or may not store it for all eternity.

      • TheCaconym [any]
        ·
        4 years ago

        Of course they are. They basically took what was a decentralized, open source, encrypted (through TLS) protocol with many self-hosted servers it was hard to listen on (IRC), introduced some new features, and centralized all of it on private servers that can be accessed by intelligence agencies. They know a federated alternative is a big risk eventually.

      • unperson [he/him]
        ·
        4 years ago

        On a browser you've got a lot more control on what information you give to the websites. So from that list, they can only see your IP address without there being an obvious indicator and/or a permissions prompt. I don't know if there are Facebook or Google trackers on web Discord, but if there are, any ad blocker can block them.

        There are missing features, they don't put nearly as much optimization work to the web version so it's slower and voice chat is laggy, I suppose it works out for them because they'd much rather you'd use the desktop application.