this post was submitted on 16 Apr 2025
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Privacy
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Thanks a bunch for the suggestion, I will definitely check out Joplin's E2EE syncing. I guess I should have been more specific; I'm looking more for a way to store and synchronize notes, rather than a tool to edit them. Given that my notes are all nearly all text, most of the time I edit notes using vim or vscodium.
You should probably try moving away from this practice. First, this leaves your notes vulnerable as they are not encrypted at rest. Second, those programs are not designed for private notes, meaning there is the potential for various leaks to happen that you may not even be able to catch (temporary system files, etc.). Using a dedicated notes editor (like Joplin) means you are using something designed to keep your notes confidential.
Disclaimer: In the case of Joplin specifically, the developers take issue with implementing encryption at rest. Their philosophy is "If your computer's disk is encrypted, then all your notes are already encrypted at rest." This is flawed thinking for many reasons that I won't get into here.
To add on to note taking, Obsidian is an open source alternative that is designed for markdown. It also has an in-built vim mode
This is wrong. Obsidian is not open source. It's a closed source app, that uses an open format (i.e. markdown).
I've seen this often and fallen for it myself, so much so that I think it could be considered an instance of the Mandela Effect xD
edit: see "Restrictions" in TOS https://obsidian.md/terms