4 points

Weird.

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16 points

TELL ME ABOUT THE OVARIES! I MUST KNOW ABOUT THE OVARIES!

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61 points

FYI there are some apps on the F-Droid store that probably won’t have to protect any data from the authorities because it stays in your phone and is not sent anywhere to begin with.

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50 points
*

Fwiw, this article says the name of the app is Clue. As a dude, I have no need of such an app, but as a security minded individual, will encourage my female friends to use it if needed and hope the developers continue to have security in mind.

Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin has blocked a bill in the state that would have banned law enforcement from enforcing search warrants for menstrual data stored in tracking apps on mobile phones or other electronic devices,

And as a Virginian, I will once again vote against the enemy of security and privacy: Glenn Youngkin.

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3 points

Youngkin can’t run for reelection next year.

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8 points

I am disgusted that such a person would share the same name as me.

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79 points
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There are foss offline period tracking apps you can reccommend instead. Best if they just don’t have the data at all

Mensinator

Bluemoon

Drip

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23 points
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Add Periodical to the list. Data stored locally, and you can export it and transfer it to your new device in a .json file.

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6 points

Time to start self hosting these for my friends

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8 points

Be careful with that, it could make you a target for a visit

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39 points

No self hosting needed! As I mentioned, these apps are fully offline - all data is stored on-device

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50 points

As they should. I hope they burn all data and figure out a way to function going forwards without storing any data

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34 points
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Or they could just store the data locally on the user’s device and not transmit it back to a central server, such that the company never even has possession of the data nor any way to retrieve it? Like I get it would require a major rewrite if they weren’t already doing this, but at least they’d be keeping their users safe while also having no way for authorities to gain any data.

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5 points

concerns anti-abortion state laws could allow phone searches for menstrual data

If the police search your phone then that would not protect you.

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9 points

Probably a form of e2ee

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4 points

That requires that you trust the app vendor not to have some sort of back door, no?

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2 points
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True, unless it’s open source and maybe self hosted.

Edit: Nevermind, I’m right, I have no confidence in my own intelligence lol. If the key is on the phone and the phone stores the encrypted data to the server, that’ll be secure

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3 points

Not necessarily. If you trust the code running on your device then there is no backdoor they could install on a server that would break e2ee. They would have to backdoor the client where the keys are.

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