Originally written on December 29th, 2020. Last modified around early 2022. Discord by OpenFeint Ltd __________________________________________________________________ I think Discord is not appropiate for anyone because, contrary to popular belief, it works against the user in many ways. Technologically Besides [1]being spyware, Discord has implemented a black box system to flag accounts automatically, having to now follow a dubious-at-best laundry list to not be coerced into [2]giving them your phone number. You may not believe my personal account, but I was banned from 3 accounts for using a custom client (Ripcord). The following things were taken care of, however they were futile efforts: 1. Changed IP address 2. Used popular email services (google mail and mail.com) 3. Used spare phone numbers, every time I was asked to verify it 4. maybe other things, ask me for more On all 3 accounts, whenever I responded to a direct message, it got my account disabled. All 3 times, with an email response stating I would not get my account back. Also, when a friend's account was disabled, he said he was transsexual, and it got him unbanned. There have also been cases of users suspected to be under the minimum age for Discord, that is 13, being requested to send their government-issued ID: [3][1] [4][2, in Russian]. Tangentially, don't forget about those [5]staffed at Discord (cub porn scandal) and their [6]marketing strategies (built on shilling). They also have a [7]blatant political bias. (free speech for me but not for thee...) But it gets worse. There is also public proof they automate analysis of anything you put through their network. A prime example is [8]their purchase of Sentropy, an "AI anti-harassment company". [9]One can only wonder where they came from... Another one is them using Google Cloud Storage for their CDN, as one can clearly see a reference to it when a file is unsuccessfully accessed: AccessDenied Access denied.
Anonymous caller does not have storage.objects.get access to the Google Cloud Storage object.
You could presume they are just using this for affordability reasons, however, Microsoft's PhotoDNA is known to be used by Discord: [10](original) [11](local archive) We reported 6,948 accounts to NCMEC during the second half of 2020. This figure represents distinct accounts reported and not the total number of reports submitted. The majority of our reports were for child sexual abuse images flagged by PhotoDNA hashing software. Trust & Safety reviews all flagged images and reports confirmed instances of child-harm content. These totals are represented as āMedia reportsā in the graph above. Another 83 of our reports were for higher-harm grooming or endangerment situations. Trust & Safety thoroughly investigates all cases that could result in immediate harm to a minor. We partner closely with NCMEC to ensure that time-sensitive escalations receive prompt attention. Realistically, the only way PhotoDNA could do this is if it had samples to compare to, [12]and that seems to be the case (note the infographic's source). They hash the images first, of course, but there's still the question: where do they get those samples from? Hmmmm... Anyway, this is just speculation, but I believe with all this proof of weird automation, it would not be far-fetched to say they are also using [13]Google CloudVision AI to identify and datamine the contents of all images in general (the whole botnet package, right?). Now, to round it off, Discord's founder Jason Citron had founded a company called OpenFeint which was subject to a class action suit over privacy issues [14](more info here). He sure learned a lesson from that, it's impossible to do that against Discord now. [15][youtube] Alternatives? I don't mean to market to you with this little writeup ([16]once again, not like them...). But [17]XMPP and [18]Mumble have worked quite well for me so far. Not only are they quite feature rich in their own right, but you have the promises of independence, security and privacy. They're also computationally effective and bandwidth effective, even moreso than Discord. I suggest you try them out as an alternative for online communication at any scale. "But the alternatives don't have everything Discord has!" With time, I've either found those features' ideas manifested in a different way, or just either forgot about them or don't miss them. Although personally I don't do video conferencing, I've heard about [19]Jitsi Meet, [20]Spreed and [21]BigBlueButton. Hopefully some XMPP clients are able to leverage [22]jitsi-videobridge in the future, instead of having to use its WebRTC interface (Jitsi Meet). Socially It's clear this happens throughout history, but, right now, Discord has faciliated the descent into a mindset in which the person is a slave of himself, impulsed by emotionality, almost losing a capacity of insight. At least, that's what it seems like when I bring up the Discord Question to any Discord user. The vicious cycle of "but all my friends use Discord" can only be ended by realizing that's what Discord itself WANTS happening, and working actively to escape it. I invite you to begin a migration to a better communications system right now, because tomorrow you'll say "tomorrow", and it will never happen. References 1. https://spyware.neocities.org/articles/discord.html 2. https://wowana.me/blog/guess-im-done-with-discord.xht 3. https://support.discord.com/hc/en-us/community/posts/360049578634-Discord-won-t-accept-my-government-issued-id-to-proof-I-m-over-13- 4. https://support.discord.com/hc/en-us/community/posts/360071841152 5. https://www.polygon.com/2019/1/30/18203692/discord-nsfw-policy-furry-cub 6. https://archive.is/5Lkrw 7. https://archive.is/WIR4D 8. https://medium.com/sentropy/sentropy-x-discord-1ed5c4269896 9. https://temora.neocities.org/sentropy/sentropy.html 10. https://blog.discord.com/discord-transparency-report-july-dec-2020-34087f9f45fb 11. https://www.retroimages.net/mirror/archive/discord_transparency_report_july-dec_2020.html 12. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:PhotoDNA_Process.png 13. https://cloud.google.com/vision/ 14. https://archive.is/Q4N9J 15. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EHKtl074B6k 16. https://archive.is/5Lkrw 17. https://xmpp.org/ 18. https://mumble.info/ 19. https://jitsi.org/ 20. https://github.com/strukturag/spreed-webrtc 21. https://bigbluebutton.org/ 22. https://github.com/jitsi/jitsi-videobridge