On Mon, 20 Feb 2023 at 10:39, David Kleuker wrote: > > Hello, > > since the GCC project seem not to be reachable in the Fediverse (only Twitter > linked on website), i contact you here about this issue. > > https://chaos.social/@davidak/109893176873158932 > > The Free Software Foundation and the GNU project promote and create Free > Software that respects users freedom. The GCC Development Mission Statement > is "Supporting the goals of the GNU project." > > So i was surprised to see that you recommend the e-mail providers "Gmail, > Yahoo, Hotmail, or similar" that are known not to respect the users privacy, > on https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/createaccount.cgi. > > I suggest removing the examples since most people coming to the bug tracker > should know what an e-mail provider is and instead recommend to use an e-mail > alias to protect from spam on the main address.
I think we should just drop the recommendation to use a throwaway email account. Or water it down to a much weaker suggestion ("The email address linked to your account might become publicly visible, so if you are concerned about corporate email addresses or other non-public email addresses being exposed, you might want to consider using a different address for your bugzilla account"). Bugzilla doesn't show email addresses to non-logged in users, and account creation is restricted to stop spammers logging in now. Email addresses are shown in barely obfuscated form at https://gcc.gnu.org/pipermail/gcc-bugs/2023-February/812879.html but nowadays spammers have plenty of ways to obtain email addresses that don't rely on scraping web pages. I'm not sure the emphasized recommendation to use web mail accounts really makes sense. What if my primary email account is a web mail account? Does that make me safer from spam? Or should I create a second webmail account just for GCC bugzilla? I think we should just let users decide how to manage their own email infosec.