![]() ![]() However, the post is essentially useless because it simply repeats what is already published on their site. The idea is to impress upon (potential) customers just how seriously they take it all. UPDATE (): Nozbe's CEO has blogged about Nozbe's privacy (see " Your data privacy explained"). It's beyond me why they don't offer this information up front on their website in clear text so that customers know more about where they can expect their data to be stored. How are Australia and Japan in the EU?īy the way: Nozbe rent Amazon S3 server space, they encrypt user data at rest, and they say that if you delete your account, they will wipe all your data within 2 weeks, saving only the email account you signed up with. Their customer support guy also told me they have servers in Germany, Ireland, Australia and Japan. It didn't bother them sufficiently to get it right as a matter of priority. It took for them until the end of February (7 weeks) to sort this out. I've already contacted our site administrator, they'll do this as soon as possible. Regarding the NSA claim, I'm sorry, it was my mistake - of course, we'll remove the information from our main page, as well as from our help page. When I pointed out the next day that no measures seem to have been taken: As I was informed, measures were taken to remove that information from our website. Here is what their customer support said (12th January 2017):Į must recognize and apologize for the information that was published on our Help Page about Nozbe being NSA-proof. I specifically contacted Nozbe about this. The NSA (National Security Agency) is an extremely powerful intelligence organization that has orchestrated some of the most sophisticated cyber attacks in history, including on non-US targets such as the data of EU politicians and companies. Our main data servers are located outside of the USA (NSA-safe!) - in the European Union.Ībsolute bullsh*t. We take pride in our server infrastructure which we designed with customer data safety in mind. Negligence over security/privacy informationīefore March 2017, Nozbe's website claimed: Instead you can sort your projects by tagging them (that's a separate tagging system to "categories" (the GTD equivalent of "contexts"), which you can use to tag your tasks. No nested projects/sub-projects like in, e.g.
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