this post was submitted on 06 Jul 2023
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That may not be possible with web technology.
Browsers send URLs to web servers. The web server has to have the URL the user wants in order to serve a response; and it has to know who the user is in order to check permissions (e.g. don't accept a moderation action from a user who is not a moderator).
This inherently creates an opportunity for the web server to record any details about that exchange.
What if database entries are encrypted, so that a person cannot match email and username with the requests in the urls?
Users' client create encryption key on client side. Would it make sense?
If you consider the server to be malicious, why would you trust any claim that the data is encrypted?
I am thinking more of a Meta "threads" -like situation. Not necessarily malicious, just a different privacy expectations between user and provider