squirrelitude: (Default)
Dreamwidth is a little unusual in giving everyone their own subdomain. Off the top of my head, I can only think of three other sites that do this: Its predecessor (Livejournal), Tumblr, and DeviantArt. There are almost certainly others, but it's uncommon.

Even though all communications to the site are done over a secure connection, so the *contents* of the pages are hidden from your ISP, any government interlopers, nosy parents who have installed spyware on the home router, and people snooping on your use of insecure café WiFi... the domain name you're visiting (here, squirrelitude.dreamwidth.org) is still being broadcast in two ways:


  • When your computer asks the Domain Name System for the IP address of the site, it sends the domain name out in the clear[1], and the DNS server of course knows what domain you're asking for
  • When your computer then connects to that IP address, it mentions the domain name in the initial message to the server[2]


That means that within a few minutes of poking around on Dreamwidth, anyone who can watch your internet traffic likely knows 1) who your friends are, and 2) by that token, who *you* are. (If you stick to just your Reading Page, you are not leaking your circle's usernames to any watchers, but you are leaking your own.)

I feel like this is maybe something that could and should be changed, since DW is already a centralized service and doesn't *need* separate domain names. (My social media prototype will *need* it, to some extent, which is a sobering thought.) I don't know if I believe this strongly enough to advocate for it,

Another option is to access DW via Tor! I just fired up TAILS and confirmed that I can log in to Dreamwidth just fine. [3] (No captchas or other nonsense.) Unlinking your home IP from the domain you're visiting (and those domains from each other) in the eyes of someone snooping on network traffic is *precisely* what Tor is for. So regardless of whether DW takes action on this, if this is a privacy issue for you, there is a way you can protect yourself. (Also applies to Tumblr, DeviantArt, etc.)


[1] This first part does not apply for people using experimental DNS-over-HTTPS—only the DNS server can read the request

[2] The Server Name Indication TLS header, which is unencrypted in current versions of TLS. TLS 1.3 allows encrypting it, but that's still being rolled out.

[3] Tor is quite safe to use as long as you're visiting HTTPS websites, which is most sites these days. But advice to heed browser warnings about invalid certificates applies doubly so over Tor. If you ignore those, Tor becomes *less* safe than using the internet directly. So don't. :-)
squirrelitude: (Default)
A few months ago (in October) Facebook put out new policies on sexual solicitation [archive 2018-12-06]. These policies are incredibly overbroad, to the point that they cover any of these:


  • A post that includes explicit discussion of sex
  • Using sexual slang (while mentioning a sex act)
  • Discussing fetishes (while mentioning a sex act)
  • "Hey, anyone else want to go to the Boston Baby Dolls show tonight?" (local burlesque show)
  • Mentioning sexual orientation (while mentioning a sex act)


This only hit the press recently, and Facebook of course has denied that their moderators (their oh so consistent and wise, overworked, underpaid, and undertrained moderators) would remove posts based on e.g. sexual orientation. But this is Facebook, so I'm taking their statement with a whole pile of salt, spread out into a shape that spells "YEAH RIGHT".

And of course, no reassurances from them on whether they would remove frank discussion of sex, such as might occur in (off the top of my head) rape victim support groups, or private posts where people are asking advice.

This is likely all further fallout from SESTA/FOSTA, which passed earlier this year. The stated aim was to make sex trafficking more difficult, but actual anti-sex-trafficking groups derided it (even the Justice Department hated it) because it actually makes life worse for people who are victims of sex trafficking, and for sex workers who aren't being exploited. And now it's hitting people who aren't even in the sex business in any way, shape, or form and just want to talk about sex, as adults sometimes do.

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