💾 Archived View for vigrey.com › privacy.gmi captured on 2024-12-17 at 10:26:41. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
⬅️ Previous capture (2024-07-09)
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IMPORTANT: THIS IS NOT A LEGAL DOCUMENT. I AM NOT MAKING PROMISES. I'M JUST VOLUNTARILY STATING WHAT I'M DOING ON THIS HTTP/GEMINI SERVER IN GOOD FAITH FOR THE SAKE OF TRANSPARENCY.
Every request over the IP (Internet Protocol) contains the source IP address of the request. That's part of how the Internet is able to work in the first place. This means that all TCP/IP requests to the HTTP and Gemini versions of this site will include your IP address.
For visits to the HTTP and Gemini versions of my site, I do not store any of those IP addresses and do not physically look at the IP addresses. If you were to ask me to find a single IP address that has visited the site, I would only be able to point you to IP addresses that I have control of, because I already know those IP addresses and know that I visit my own site.
Currently I do not track or store how many times a page or resource was requested. At some point in the future, I may want to add a "hit counter" to show how many views a particular page has gotten, but I haven't decided one way or another on that yet. If I do decide to track how many requests happen to pages, I will be sure to update this page. This page and others would have a hit counter on it as well, at least for the HTTP version of the site.
Every HTTP request includes some information, including whether the request method was a "GET", "POST", "DELETE", etc... request. This also includes data about the browser called the "User-Agent". For instance, the User-Agent of Chrome version 110 on Windows 10 64-bit edition is "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/110.0.0.0 Safari/537.36". Along with the User-Agent, a header called the "Referer" header is sent by the user's browser if the user comes to my site by clicking on a link from another website. For instance, if the user is at https://example.com and there is a link to a page on my site on example.com that the user clicks on, it is likely that the user's web browser will send a referer header of "https://example.com".
I do not track or store HTTP request headers of requests to the HTTP version of my site. With that said, my HTTP server analyzes the User-Agent and Referer headers of requests in order to block or return an HTTP 503 error to specific requests.
The reason for this is to prevent referrals from Hacker News or Reddit along with link preview fetches from many Fediverse/ActivityPub (Mastodon, Pleroma, Akkoma, Misskey, gotosocial, and Friendica) services from causing too much stress on this server.
The HTTP version of my site does not use any Javascript. It also blocks Javascript from loading.