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Bizarro | 4 years ago

This gets turned into a negative because HN is chock full of leftist authoritarians that don't like privacy from government prying eyes.

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randomswede|4 years ago

I am arguably a leftist, but probably not an authoritarian. I am all for privacy. In fact, one could argue that Proton could have gone further in basic system architecture to provide that than they seem to have to.

But, the flip side of that is that the more complicated you make your tech stack, the longer it takes to getting it running, and to fix it when it inevitably breaks.

On the other hand, they seem to have recommended using a VPN to access them, if you were concerned about IP metadata being disclosed.

On the gripping hand, they were also served with a subpoena, and depending on exactly how it was formulated, it may well have been no scope to fight the subpoena in court, and as I think that "follow the law" is generally a good thing, I think that on the balance Proton may be culpable of negligence, but not actual malice here.

consumer451|4 years ago

Oooo edgy straw man.... delicious.

What do you mean by "leftist authoritarian" exactly?

Can you give some examples of notable American "leftist authoritarians?"

antifa|4 years ago

Yeah you can't even go one thread on HN without some Maoist telling you to let your employees unionize /s