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Privacy Statement Updates September 2022 #582
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Updates to privacy statement
@@ -33,13 +34,13 @@ To see our Privacy Notice to residents of California, please go to [GitHub's Not | |||
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| Section | What can you find there? | | |||
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| [Who is responsible for the processing of your information](#who-is-responsible-for-the-processing-of-your-information) | Subject to limited exceptions, GitHub is the controller and entity responsible for the processing of your Personal Data in connection with the Website or Service. | |
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Is the change from "Personal Data" to "personal data" a stylistic change?
I note that the paragraph above is still intact:
All capitalized terms have their definition in GitHub’s Terms of Service, unless otherwise noted here.
Presuming this capitalization change is unintentional, it has the unfortunate effect of decoupling "Personal Data" from the definition provided in the GitHub Terms of Service, which means that "personal data" is no longer as delineated there, but could well be anything.
If this is an intentional change, it would seem better made as a visible change to the Terms of Service. If the intent is not to change the Terms of Service but to arbitrarily expand "personal data" without drawing attention, well, that seems evil.
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Looking into this further -- it looks like "Personal Data" is defined these days in the GitHub Data Protection Agreement. Perhaps this was being decapitalized since it is not directly defined (afaict) in the GitHub Terms of Service?
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Oh bet
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The collection of information and sale of it I think is something that has been going on for a long time. I think what matters is knowing what information we provide. But it's always good to know
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salve cade os BR
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in a court of law, doesn't "Personal Data" mean "personal data" ?
lol
Policies/github-privacy-statement.md
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Our emails to users may contain a pixel tag, which is a small, clear image that can tell us whether or not you have opened an email and what your IP address is. We use this pixel tag to make our email communications more effective and to make sure we are not sending you unwanted email. | ||
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### DNT | ||
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"[Do Not Track](https://www.eff.org/issues/do-not-track)" (DNT) is a privacy preference you can set in your browser if you do not want online services to collect and share certain kinds of information about your online activity from third party tracking services. GitHub responds to browser DNT signals and follows the [W3C standard for responding to DNT signals](https://www.w3.org/TR/tracking-dnt/). If you would like to set your browser to signal that you would not like to be tracked, please check your browser's documentation for how to enable that signal. There are also good applications that block online tracking, such as [Privacy Badger](https://privacybadger.org/). | ||
"[Do Not Track](https://www.eff.org/issues/do-not-track)" (DNT) is a privacy preference you can set in your browser if you do not want online services to collect and share certain kinds of information about your online activity from third party tracking services. Some services may respond to browser DNT signals and follow the [W3C standard for responding to DNT signals](https://www.w3.org/TR/tracking-dnt/). If you would like to set your browser to signal that you would not like to be tracked, please check your browser's documentation for how to enable that signal. There are also good applications that block online tracking, such as [Privacy Badger](https://privacybadger.org/) or [uBlock Origin](https://github.com/gorhill/uBlock/). |
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Let me prefix this by stating that I am a complete layman.
Previously: *GitHub* responds to browser DNT signals and follows the W3C spec.
Now: Some random services, somewhere in the world, hosted by GitHub or somebody else *may* respond to browser DNT signals and follow the W3C spec.
Doesn't this change invalidate the whole paragraph and turns it into a generic wiki article?
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Dunno, they will stop respecting DNT but leave this paragraph and make it seem as if they do. This is just confusing.
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"Confusing" is one way to put it.
Edit:
@zzo38 articulated my personal opinion better than I could so I'll quote part of their comment here:
I also think that they should avoid using confusing privacy policies; the mention of DNT should either be kept as is if GitHub uses the DNT header to reduce tracking, or deleted entirely if GitHub does not use the DNT header. If it does so only in some cases, it should mention what cases these are. The privacy policy made sense before the change in the section about DNT, although the change mentioned above makes it confusing (as other comments already mention).
[..]
I have no problem with adding these non-essential cookies to the enterprise marketing pages, as long as the rest of GitHub can be used without it and it is documented which pages these are (and if the cookie domain is the same, also which cookies). Moving the enterprise marketing pages to a separate domain seems to me to be a good idea though, in order to be clearly distinguished (although a subdomain is probably good enough, in my opinion; as long as it is documented clearly which subdomains these are).
Emphasis are mine.
In my opinion, documented
should mean being very specific and being part of a legally binding document like the privacy policy.
An example for not being specific is this part of the changes:
As described below, we may use non-essential cookies on certain pages of our website
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:))
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So; let's get this straight:
- According to GDPR article 22 data subjects may exercise their right to object to processing using technical specifications.
- GitHub acknowledges the DNT signal as a valid technical standard, i.e. technical specification.
- Moreover; GitHub honors - or at least used to honor - that signal, illustrating that they have the capacity to respond to it appropriately.
Yeah... uhm..
How is attempting to weasel yourself out from under that not morally blackest evil?
You lost me at |
Github is being undermined by Microsoft. |
so what github alternative is everyone using these days? asking for a friend. |
"We are also committing that going forward, we will only use cookies that are required for us to serve GitHub.com." Apparently in corporate terms, a "commitment" is now less than two calendar years of obligation. Good to know. Though, I guess I don't visit the marketing pages and hence, don't really care that much? Corporations being untrustworthy isn't new territory. Literally just "business advice": Your marketing teams should be weighing the value of the data here against the cost of "yet another breach of user trust and commitment", user trust, of course, being something extremely hard to earn back. |
Marketing people don't care about user trust or commitments. They'll just burn things to the ground and move on to the next corp job, each time making the world a slightly worse place. |
Microsoft fucking sucks, GitHub wasn't evil until Microsoft really started to abuse GitHub. |
@TheMaverickProgrammer GitLab probbably. |
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Requesting a change: Don't add this.
I understand that cookies are helpful for analytics and gathering sales funnel data. It's always sad when companies don't keep prior promises, though 😟 If you must break the promise, here's my suggestion, for what it's worth: move enterprise marketing pages (maybe even all marketing pages besides the front page?) off of Then point marketing links from the front page to that domain. This will allow folks to deal with that domain separately from |
I personally feel that the enterprise version can be made independently. |
As a happy GitHub user I just hope all this recreational outrage doesn't result in GitHub allocating more time or resources than would otherwise be required to complete this change. Full speed ahead! |
I'd want GitHub to remove Microsoft, then continue full speed ahead |
Why are people getting so riled up when this change only impacts the Enterprise marketing subdomains? Makes no sense to me how this of all things is getting negative attention. Majority of people don't use GitHub Enterprise, as its only for businesses, And they're just cookies. Use uBlock Origin as it says if you really can't stand a few cookies on subdomains you'll probably never end up going to. Also, people love pointing the finger at Microsoft, as if this change was demanded by them. It more than likely wasn't. There are always going to be changes that people don't like, but not all changes are influenced by the parent company. If Microsoft was puttng their hands all over GitHub, they probably would've moved GitHub to the Microsoft Policy Statement a long time ago. |
Cuz GitHub said they wouldnt use cookies |
How exactly does this in any way impact user trust? It doesn't impact the main site, like the dashboard, the landing page, or any other part of GitHub like profiles, repositories, or organizations. It literally only impacts the enterprise marketing pages, and its for sales data tracking & analytics. GitHub Enterprise is a very business-oriented product, so the only visitors to those pages will be by business leaders potentially interested in GitHub Enterprise, or users who land on that page by mistake. And I believe that is what GitHub meant when they said "to serve GitHub.com" - the main site (dashboard, repos, profiles, etc), not including stuff related to their Enterprise product, so I genuinely don't believe they broke their commitment. People are overreacting, as usual, to insignificant changes that don't really impact them. |
Thats fine but fuck microsoft for existing |
There's a reason this PR has 128+ negative reactions 👎 |
Also, they have, take a look at this PR. |
This was more than likely not Microsoft's doing. Not everything a subsidiary of Microsoft does is because of Microsoft itself. You have the vast majority of comments on this PR (at 8 comments), and your opinion isn't be all end all. Most of the negative reactions are additionally probably from people who don't understand the scope of what GitHub said back when they committed to not use cookies not necessary to serve GitHub itself - they probably didn't extend it to the Enterprise marketing pages to begin with and always meant the main site that serves repositories and profiles and such. There are things worse than cookies by the way, like actual trackers embedded in web pages. Cookies are relatively harmless if used sparingly and for very specific purposes like tracking sales analytics or for keeping a user logged into their web browsers, or in a specific GitHub use case, tracking the current site theme. There is nothing wrong with stuff like this. You seem awfully mad at Microsoft for some reason, as if they stole your pet dog or something. This isn't 2000s & early 2010s-era Microsoft, Microsoft is nowhere near as bad as they were when Steve Ballmer was the CEO of Microsoft. Ever since Satya became CEO, I have noticed a significant improvement in Microsoft's business culture and strategy. MS was way, way, way worse back when Ballmer was CEO. (also, slight question, why upvote your own comments?) |
I don't know why anyone at GitHub would do this change, and Microsoft is the only other entity with the authority to make such a change.
I just poke in whenever this comes up on my GitHub notifications.
That is a good point, however, that doesn't change the fact that GitHub is no longer the white and fluffy angel that it was.
While you seem quite intelligent, I don't think that you understand that cookies could actually be used as slight trackers, and if used to their fullest potential, complete on-site tracking for AI/ML based targeted recommendations for profit.
Microsoft is still a mega-corp. They're still 'evil', just like Google or Apple. I also don't see much of a difference with the two CEOs. One was making more money, one was discussing ethics more often, but in the end, Microsoft is still somewhat invasive. To add on, Microsoft decided to absolutely RUIN Minecraft, a game that I don't really play these days, but my friends play a lot.
(also, slight question, why downvote my comments?) |
I think that the cookies ought to be documented, so that you know which cookie means what. I also think that they should avoid using confusing privacy policies; the mention of DNT should either be kept as is if GitHub uses the DNT header to reduce tracking, or deleted entirely if GitHub does not use the DNT header. If it does so only in some cases, it should mention what cases these are. The privacy policy made sense before the change in the section about DNT, although the change mentioned above makes it confusing (as other comments already mention). Mentioning other programs such as Privacy Badger and uBlock Origin are OK, although it might be worth to add a disclaimer if GitHub is not affiliated with such programs, even if they are hosted on GitHub. (Since GitHub is used for many FOSS projects, it is likely that some of them will be.) I have no problem with adding these non-essential cookies to the enterprise marketing pages, as long as the rest of GitHub can be used without it and it is documented which pages these are (and if the cookie domain is the same, also which cookies). Moving the enterprise marketing pages to a separate domain seems to me to be a good idea though, in order to be clearly distinguished (although a subdomain is probably good enough, in my opinion; as long as it is documented clearly which subdomains these are). About alternatives to GitHub, I would not recommend GitLab because it will not display the files if JavaScripts are not enabled. However, it is acceptable to use GitLab if there are mirrors on multiple services. GitHub, Codeberg, and NotABug, and some others, also use JavaScripts, although the files can be displayed even if JavaScripts are disabled (even though there is a note that says enable JavaScripts, it is not required to simply view files), so it is acceptable. Another alternative is Sourcehut, which also doesn't need JavaScripts (and says that all features work without JavaScripts, although it still has some). |
I don't mind GitLab, except that I have to pause for 15 minutes to finish laughing every time i see "Merge Requests" |
What happened to this policy https://github.blog/2020-12-17-no-cookie-for-you/ ? I guess it's a bit like Microsoft ❤️ Linux.... |
Github promised not to track with cookies just a few years ago, that's the issue |
Thank you so much for all the wonderful things that I have to make a new world |
Thanks fort this ! |
Thanks for this ! |
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Money
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Tr.all.m
others |
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report abuse |
help me to back my files and account |
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gjbvcbbmjf
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Duplicate of #
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我代表我自己评论他们给我个人这么多年的定制体验服务!这种所谓的定制,定义为故意入侵、不问自取、再到被人发现这种定制原来一切都是别人太贪了,但有些东西又无法改变那些特定受权给我个人的权利?不如我个人提议一下吧,我把我个人的最终用户和账户持有人的所有权利。包括他们五大企业受给我个人的账户持有人权利一次过全部转给某人好吗?这个可以是开发者,也可以是支持服务者!这样就不用再回到以前了,再也不用演“三国演义”!更加不用愁如何谈论“三英战吕布”这么复习的角色化了!不过我个人的的确确可以全身以退,不贪你们任何一方的一分一毫!我还在这里代表我个人多谢你们、他们和(或)它们,给我的确学会很多道理!谢谢
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我个人现在是每日每夜都不知道自己在干什么呢?大家都是想好的方向走下去的话?我希望给回我个人一点信任吧!
GitHub is introducing non-essential cookies on web pages that market our products to businesses. These cookies will provide analytics to improve the site experience and personalize content and ads for enterprise users. This change is only on subdomains, like resources.github.com, where GitHub markets products and services to enterprise customers. Github.com will continue to operate as-is.
This change updates the Privacy Statement based on this new activity.
These updates will go into effect after the 30-day notice and comment period, on September 1, 2022.
See comment below with clarifications and changes made at the end of the comment period.
Comment on #582 Privacy Statement Updates September 2022
We want to thank everyone for their review and feedback on the Privacy Statement Update. We appreciate and share your passion for developer privacy. GitHub remains committed to having the highest privacy standards and will continue to center the needs of developers in all of our platform decisions. We intend for this to be a minimally invasive change that will enable us to provide the best tools to our users. In response to your comments, we are providing the following changes and points of clarification:
DNT and self-help browser extensions
Commenters raised questions about our language on DNT and self-help browser extensions. We've pushed a commit that:
• Folds the existing DNT and browser extension information into a new section on disabling non-essential cookies.
• Specifies there will be a user setting to disable non-essential cookies and provides additional details to clarify which cookies will be used and for what reasons.
• Specifies that DNT will be honored on GitHub, and that if a DNT signal is sent, GitHub will not load third party resources which set non-essential cookies, so that we do not have to rely on third parties honoring DNT.
• Browsers' built-in tracking protection has advanced significantly in recent years, so we've noted that configuring that built-in protection may block non-essential cookies.
• Separated mentions of browser extensions designed to block tracking, and extensions designed to block unwanted content with the effect of blocking tracking, for clarity, though using either alone or in combination may block non-essential cookies.
• Changed links with additional information on DNT and browser extensions to point to their respective Wikipedia articles for neutrality, currency, and to clarify that these are not GitHub products (though of course we're proud that many privacy protection tools are developed on GitHub).
Finally, some have asked why we’re explaining technical self-help tools. GitHub has a very broad user base, including new developers – and we want everyone to be informed about the scope of their options, including technical options.
Enterprise user experience
Commenters asked for clarification about how this change will impact the enterprise user experience. We are introducing cookies on GitHub’s Enterprise Marketing Pages (e.g. resources.github.com), not on Enterprise user accounts. We intend for this change to make it easier for our Marketing team to better understand the needs of users who are visiting Enterprise Marketing Pages and connect them with the solutions that will benefit them most.
Users who visit these pages will have the option to express their cookies preferences by navigating to the link in the footer of the page.
Stylistic change
Commenters have asked why ‘Personal Data’ was changed to ‘personal data’ in the Privacy Statement update. We made personal data lowercase because it is not a defined term in our Terms of Service, for consistency with “All capitalized terms have their definition in GitHub’s Terms of Service, unless otherwise noted here.” The stylistic change does not impact its definition.