With the stories about data from period tracking apps being shared with law enforcement, I was wondering if there was a self hosted alternative I could host for my daughter. My searches so far have not returned any good results. Thanks!
I wrote a period app for my partner, everything is encrypted and never leaves the device.
It has a option where you can set false passwords, so that if you are being compelled to unlock it, it will get up fake data.
Code is open source: https://github.com/cameroncros/PrivatePeriodTracker
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.cross.privateperiodtracker
It may not meet your needs, but perhaps worth a look. I am open to adding features (except for ads and tracking obviously).
(I have posted this before, but with an inappropriate account)
This is the lord’s work made real right here. Thanking you so much from Texas.
Texas is exactly why I wrote it. I wish my app was a waste of time and no one ever needs it :(
Thats reall nice
Use the one built into iPhones and either encrypt iCloud so Apple cannot read it ( but no way to recover if you forget password) or turn off iCloud sync for health data (you will lose history with new phone).
Or, print out a one page annual calendar and use a pencil.
Started using Drip a few months back, seems interesting as it bases next period time on the last ones.
Log28 just takes what you enter as period length to show when the next one starts.
Drip looks great! I’ve been using Ovuview which says it keeps your data private, but being proprietary I can’t easily know for sure. I love Ovuview for its depth of tracking (Symptothermal plus any custom symptoms you want) and it’s accurate predictions.
But will be really nice if Drip works out well (gonna try it for a while first before ditching Ovuview) so I can finally use something FOSS.
Drip is a good option. Funded by Mozilla and German Govt
While that is actually nice and does focus on privacy, I’m not sure if “funded by […] government” is a good argument in favor in the context of this post…
The German Government, and it is an offline and encrypted app. Not everything governments do is bad.
The German Government, and it is an offline and encrypted app. Not everything governments do is bad.
A woman. I’m interested too… It’s really tiring keeping track of it on an analog Calendar.
If you can’t find anything, I suggest you make her a barebones one or get her to use something like etar. It’s all local.
Thank you!
I’d probably just spin up a calendar such as one on Nextcloud but also change the name of the event to another plausible name such as:
Pay day.
Grandma coming to town.
Grandma leaving town.
Walk the cat.
Pick up groceries.
Collect mail.
Drop off mail.As someone who uses Nextcloud, why do you suggest obfuscating the name of the calendar event? My nextcloud instance is only accessible from outside my LAN via HTTPS, so no concern about someone using a packet sniffer on public WiFi or something of that sort. The server is located on my property, so physical security isn’t a real concern unless someone breaks in with a USB drive or physically removes the server from the rack and steals it. If someone was to gain access to my network remotely, they’d still need login credentials for Nextcloud or for Proxmox in order to clone the VM drive.
To be clear, I’m not disagreeing with you; I’m wondering if I may be over-estimating data security on my home network. Considering you’re posting from infosec.pub, I’m assuming you know more about this than I do.
Also, I feel like I need to say that the fact that OP even needs to consider data security for something like really makes me wonder how parts of our society have gone so wrong.
If your concern for wanting to self host is that you’re concerned your government might attempt to access that data, then you should also assume they could get a warrant for that data and force you to decrypt it if it were encrypted at rest on a machine in your home.
That’s a very valid point, and certainly a reason to obfuscate the calendar event. I would argue that in general, if the concern is the government forcing you to decrypt the data, there’s really no good solution. If they have a warrant, they will get the encrypted data; the only barrier is how willing you are to refuse to give the encryption key. I think some jurisdictions prevent this on 5th amendment grounds, but I’m not not a lawyer.
Right, this is exactly what I was saying. Plausible deniability because you know you’re not going to be able to fight to protect the data when they come knocking.
The police can confiscate your servers. Considering some states are treating abortion as murder, I don’t think it’s unrealistic to say the police could raid your home and confiscate your devices just on suspicion.
The only thing safe against that is an encrypted device locked with a password, no biometrics like fingerprints or face ID. As far as I know, you can refuse to give a password under the 5th amendment, but you can’t refuse to unlock a device with a fingerprint reader or face ID.
Drip is one of the better options if you want to just download something from your app store of choice. It’s FOSS, requires minimal permissions, and seems to store all data locally.
I’m looking for a good option too. Hopefully someone chimes in with something!
I’ve heard log28 is a good simple app with a local database and without tracking. I haven’t looked at it too closely to verify much. But seems like it hasn’t had an update for a while.
If for some reason self hosting doesn’t work out, try looking into Proton Calendar. Secured, encrypted, and Swiss. They do not entertain subpoenas.
Why do you even need an app? A paper calendar should suffice. Seriously, what function does an app do?
Aside from what the other commenter said, this is something I’m looking for for my daughter and believe it or not she prefers an app.
Also, this is the self hosted community. People self host all kinds of stupid shit. Why are you here?
Besides ease of use and the practicality of having it at hand at all times, these apps show you important stats like longest time between periods, average time between periods, current time since last period. Same with length of period. All useful stats for you, your doctor, and potentially your partner if you’re trying for a baby.
Why not just make a spreadsheet?
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All of the functionality mentioned in the comment I replied to is trivial to automate in a spreadsheet with a few manual entries every month.
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Eh, fair point. That said, I use a spreadsheet for fitness, so I might be a bit biased.