Replying to nobody

They probably don’t. The fake email may be the one that strike gets, but primal (likely) would possibly have access to the email, etc that was linked to your payment method.

Worth noting that Primal claims to not be gathering any other user metrics (in App Store version) which I don’t doubt at all, but using the Apple Pay feature (which is conducted by Apple and not Primal) may cause data to come into their possession.

Primal may wish to have their lawyers look at their Privacy Policy at https://primal.net/terms as well, as it does not account for information that may be collected or revealed to Primal by Apple Pay. IANAL, but offering friendly feedback.

But on a cursory look through the iOS codebase, I haven’t seen anything concerning or intentional looking. A swift/iOS expert should feel free to correct me, but I’ve been looking at code for a lot of years, and this is my read of it.

🚫 Your #KYC "could" be exposed to #Primal if you use #Apple Pay to purchase in app purchase sats. 🚫 #Privacy #Nostr

nostr:nevent1qqs88n0g62lxwlc9as4nae82tzh5zdvpd5s6rv8796t2s6y5vhcz8lspz3mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuerpd46hxtnfdupzquhew42srcdyge8hya7cvys0vlnl0mp6snhksy7vwcrt7hsgwrlnqvzqqqqqqynk83e0

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

We are gonna blow up the credibility of chainanalysis when these Apple Pay sats are sent and reset to multiple parties with out being KYC’d at an on/off ramp. The probabilistic analysis will be unusable.