Every time when a YouTube video is embedded in Lemmy, a bot appears, suggesting to use Front-end Piped (or another) instead of YT, which is certainly recommended, due to YouTube’s inherent privacy concerns.

However, then it is not understandable, why in the case of images Imgur links are happily allowed, which is infinitely worse in terms of privacy, which shares user and usage data with the worst existing advertising companies, which makes it in little less than spyware.

As a suggestion I present 2 alternatives, which in addition to, as EU products, strictly adhere to the GDPR standard and even more.

As the main FileCoffee service, this, apart from images, supports ALL types of files, whether multimedia, video, documents, presentations or texts. Supports 15 MB/file and with optional registration to also use it as a personal host (100% free with mail, password) up to 30 MB/file, encrypted. Inclusions script one click for ShareX on Windows or MagicCap on Linux or Mac

The second is vgy.me, also privacy oriented, but supports only images, encryption, 20 MB/image, EXIF Data are removed, API for web pages.

  • GigglyBobble@kbin.social
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    No.

    Where’s the contradiction? Yes, it’s just a different prefix but it results in a different number. What I meant to adress is that very often people write MB/megabytes (10⁶ = 1,000,000 bytes) but actually mean MiB/mebibytes (2²⁰ = 1,048,576 bytes). RAM vendors possibly most prominently.

    • Johnny@feddit.de
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      1 year ago

      There is no contradiction. But there is also nothing contradictory or wrong with the unit MB. If I say “this is 100MB”, maybe I just… mean that? No reason to correct me.

      • GigglyBobble@kbin.social
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        1 year ago

        But there is also nothing contradictory or wrong with the unit MB.

        And I didn’t say that. Admittedly, the constraint “If the image size is defined as binary” probably could’ve been expressed better (I’m not a native speaker). File sizes are usually calculated in binary units (at least by Windows and the Linux distros I know - even though Windows continues to claim those are megabytes and Linux adopted the standardized units) and I’d bet that’s the case for file.coffee, too.

        Oh, well, I’m pretty sure we’re not really disagreeing anyway. So let’s conclude with the obligatory relevant xkcd.