• Red
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    18611 months ago

    They are no more safe than sending a message like this :). Except you would be the only person it’s targeted for. besides the admins of both instances can read them as well.

    Which is why I’m the web interface it says it’s not safe/e2e encrypted.

    Worried about it? Add a matrix handle to your profile and then it enables a “send a secure message” button in the UI. And redirects people to use matrix to send messages to you

          • @VolunTerry@monero.town
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            10 months ago

            Haha, love the image. I think everyone feels that way the first time they learn it.

            End to end encrypt emails whenever you can too. Now, getting those you communicate with to implement and utilize pgp? That’s a whole other battle.

      • @rog@lemmy.one
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        3310 months ago

        Nothing on lemmy is private. Your instance is just hosted on a server, and in this instance that server is essentially just someone elses computer. Anything you do or say on the server can be viewed by the admin and whoever they decide to delegate access to.

        This is true for practically every online service ever.

        • This is true for practically every online service ever.

          Sorry i have to correct this statement. Unless all encryption can be broken one day (which is a different discussion), end-to-end encryption can be seen as private … if both parties can trust each other to keep it so.
          One can see if a service/app does e2ee if they (best) ask you to enter your public key (and only that) which will be shared to others to enable them to encrypt messages to you (such PMs can only get decrypted with your private key which is stored nowhere but on your own devices), and verify signatures done using your privkey. In the second-best case, an application will generate a key pair on your device and instruct you to store away the private key it just generated somewhere safe and protected by a long passphrase because if you lose it your PMs can not be recovered.

          Interestingly, the ActivityPub protocol and IIRC also the Lemmy database have a “public key” field which could be used for e2ee purposes but the functionality is just not implemented.

      • @Still@programming.dev
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        2210 months ago

        the admin of your Instance has full access to your account as they have full access to the database that holds your dms

  • mo_ztt ✅
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    4811 months ago

    Short answer: Unsafe

    Long answer: UNSAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAFFFFFFFFFEEEEEEEEEEFE

  • Xylight (Photon dev)
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    4210 months ago

    DMs are basically comments without a post and only one regular user can see it. No encryption, and it can be viewed by admins. (Private message reporting is a thing)

  • BlackEco
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    3711 months ago

    DMs on the fediverse (and Lemmy) are posts with a specific visibility that marks them as DMs. They are sent like any other posts, so there’s no encryption and instance admins could in theory read them in the database.

    • @Hotzilla@sopuli.xyz
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      11 months ago

      Not in theory, in practice, but this is not high need feature.

      If you need to keep your sexting private, use another platform. If you have a exhibition fetish, go ahead.

      As a coder I can say that e2e encryption is pain in the ass, key generation and exchanging, complex and annoying to do.

      • Amju Wolf
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        410 months ago

        e2e encryption is pain in the ass, key generation and exchanging, complex and annoying to do

        No, no it’s not.

        Yes, it’s more complex than sending plaintext. But for starters it’d be extremely simple to generate a keypair for every user and publish the public key with their profile. When sending DMs you’d use this public key to encrypt the message.

        As for storing the private key you could encrypt it with (a derivative of) the user’s password, and store it decrypted possibly just in the user’s browser.

        This simple measure would prevent simple ways of reading the DMs, though obviously you still need to trust that your instance admins are actually serving you the code they claim they do. But it’d definitely prevent “accidental” misuse.

        • @kalleboo@lemmy.world
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          1410 months ago

          As for storing the private key you could encrypt it with (a derivative of) the user’s password

          And now every time a user forgets their password and does password recovery, they lose all their DMs.

          E2EE chat is a difficult problem.

          • Amju Wolf
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            10 months ago

            I mean you could just store it encrypted in the database for the basics, and for advanced users allow them to back it up.

            There are tons of ways to improve it, but there is definitely way more you can do without much inconvenience to the users. I doubt losing old DMs is a huge issue when you forget your password…

        • @Hotzilla@sopuli.xyz
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          110 months ago

          Fediverse adds level of complexity on it, like you mention.

          Malicious Lemmy instance could man-in-the-middle by providing it’s public key in behalf of the user in other side. Normally this can be mitigated by CA, but CA doesn’t fit very well in decentralized system.

          You could add AES with users own password, but problem is that same malicious instance could also steal users password.

          IMHO false sense of privacy is worst than knowing that stuff is unsecure. Again in my opinion fediverse is comparable to yelling in town square.

  • Melody Fwygon
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    11 months ago
    • It is not unsafe.
    • It is not 100% private. Admins can read your messages if they choose to investigate your messages.
    • It will not get blasted out to the whole fediverse; just to the recipient you indicated. (Unless an admin from the previous point reads your message and publishes it publicly on the fediverse)
    • You do not get to do anything naughty with it; expect to be caught if you break the rules.
    • booty [he/him]
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      11 months ago

      It is not unsafe.
      It is not 100% private. Admins can read your messages if they choose to investigate your messages.

      These points contradict one another.

      • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏
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        511 months ago

        How so? The message is safely delivered solely to the intended recipient, albeit in plain text (not private).

        If there’s anywhere that the commonly used email analogy fits, I think it would be here

            • @TrustingZebra@lemmy.one
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              410 months ago

              Unless I run a Lemmy instance myself (which is possible), I have zero reason to trust an instance’s admins.

              Even if my instance’s admin happens to be the founder of privacyguides.org, that doesn’t mean he will never read any “private” messages (or be forced by someone else to hand them over).

            • booty [he/him]
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              010 months ago

              What definition of safe are you using which makes a private messaging system without privacy safe? What would have to occur for it to become unsafe, if not being private does not make it unsafe in your eyes?

        • booty [he/him]
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          210 months ago

          They absolutely do. A private messaging system which is not private is the definition of unsafe. Especially in the context of a post on !privacy@lemmy.ml

        • booty [he/him]
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          010 months ago

          If something claims to be unsafe and delivers, that doesn’t make it any more safe.

  • @Gork@lemm.ee
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    1210 months ago

    Anyone remember the days when they were called PMs? They are least used the word Private in the acronym.

  • Marxism-Fennekinism
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    610 months ago

    Not safe at all because it was not designed to be, it even tells you as much. Use them to exchange e2ee contacts and then use that.

  • booty [he/him]
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    411 months ago

    I don’t know any of the technical details, but my understanding is they’re very unsafe. Our instance has a warning recommending that you take conversations involving sensitive information to Matrix

  • Grownbravy [they/them]
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    311 months ago

    I dont think they’re supposed to be any safe at all. As part of our board culture we’re to expect that DMs offer no security, and to use other platforms if it’s a concern.