The purpose of this post is not to endorse the use of Reddit (), but rather to inform users of a privacy-friendly approach in case they need to utilize the platform.
Redlib is a private front-end like Invidious but for Reddit.
Redlib currently implements most of Reddit’s (signed-out) functionalities but still lacks a few features.
(If a particular instance doesn’t work, try others to see if they work)
This section outlines how Redlib compares to Reddit in terms of speed and privacy.
Last tested on January 12, 2024.
Results from Google PageSpeed Insights (Redlib Report, Reddit Report).
Performance metric | Redlib | |
---|---|---|
Speed Index | 0.6s | 1.9s |
Performance Score | 100% | 64% |
Time to Interactive | 2.8s | 12.4s |
Logging: According to Reddit’s privacy policy, they “may [automatically] log information” including:
Location: The same privacy policy goes on to describe that location data may be collected through the use of:
Cookies: Reddit’s cookie notice documents the array of cookies used by Reddit including/regarding:
Logging: In production (when running the binary, hosting with docker, or using the official instances), Redlib logs nothing. When debugging (running from source without --release
), Redlib logs post IDs fetched to aid with troubleshooting.
Cookies: Redlib uses optional cookies to store any configured settings in the settings menu. These are not cross-site cookies and the cookies hold no personal data.
Settings and subscriptions are saved in browser cookies. Clearing your cookies will reset them. You can restore your current settings and subscriptions after clearing your cookies using the link given in the settings menu.
[TIP] 🔗 Want to automatically redirect Reddit links to Redlib? Use LibRedirect or Privacy Redirect!
Note: The above text presents an abridged and modified version of information found in the developer’s documentation. Some context has been removed or altered for brevity. For the full and unmodified documentation, please see the original source.
Sometimes services will try to force you to sign up for an account by blocking access to content with annoying popups. They might also break without JavaScript enabled. Frontends can allow you to get around these restrictions.
If you choose to self-host these frontends, it is important that you have other people using your instance as well in order for you to blend in. You should be careful with where and how you are hosting, as other peoples’ usage will be linked to your hosting.
When you are using an instance run by someone else, make sure to read the privacy policy of that specific instance. They can be modified by their owners and therefore may not reflect the default policy. Some instances have Tor .onion addresses which may grant some privacy as long as your search queries don’t contain PII.
Privacy has become a very important issue in modern society, with companies and governments constantly abusing their power, more and more people are waking up to the importance of digital privacy.
In this community everyone is welcome to post links and discuss topics related to privacy.
much thanks to @gary_host_laptop for the logo design :)
Is there a way to consume these instances in an app like Infinity?
Does it also filter out the users?
Great to see it works in Tor. I’ve lost read access to reedit posts due to their Tor blocking
Does redlib scrape reddit ?
It’s time to move on from paying for a reddit api and just scrape data from reddit
Distribute the workload across different vpns so reddit doesn’t rate limit
only if there was an open source reddit-like social media where users could feel home in it, sigh
Who cares for time to interactive and stuff.
How does it work? With web scraping?
is there a grease~/tampermonkey script similar to this? https://greasyfork.org/en/scripts/377047-old-reddit-redirect asking as a mobile user.redacted seems your addons work on mobile Firefox too
Just checked out safereddit and it’s indeed a pretty cool project, feels lightweight 👍. Ironically, so much effort for a website which doesn’t even like you. I mean Reddit is why I am using Lemmy now.
If only all that effort was spent improving lemmy instead…
the project was started before lemmy picked up steam
sadly reddit still hosts a lot of communities that hasnt moved here yet.
And a ton of historical content.
I’ve been using it via the LibRedirect extension for a while now and it’s great. Feels a lot more reliable than LibReddit ever was.
Sick. I love libredirect and all the proxy services but the youtube piped instances never work reliability for me.