Data Collection Concerns
Recently, rumors and accusations have been circulating regarding Insurrection collecting personal data without consent. These claims, largely pushed by Dylanjkl, the chairman of AEGIS, are false and misleading. We want to address these concerns clearly, factually, and transparently.
Website Data Collection
- Our website never collected personal data beyond what was strictly necessary for optional features.
- The Duty State Maker required login only to save duty states, histories, and analytics so users could access them across devices. This functionality is not possible without an account system.
- All data has now been deleted. Every account and all associated data have been fully wiped.
- The only personal data ever collected was an email address for account functionality.
- Passwords were stored securely using encryption, and we do not have access to them at any point.
- Emails were never sold, shared, or provided to any third party.
- The website was built using LeaderOS, a website builder that limits backend access. We did not and could not collect additional data even if we wanted to.
- All user accounts and data were deleted proactively, ensuring user safety and privacy before AEGIS could interfere.
Discord Bot Data Collection
- Our Discord bot does not collect private or personal information. This is not possible by design.
- The only data accessed or displayed comes from public Roblox APIs.
- The divisional tracking system only tracks users who have their Roblox privacy settings disabled.
- If a user enables privacy settings, Roblox blocks access, and we fully respect that limitation.
- The bot does not require logins and does not store sensitive identifiers of any kind.
Respect for User Privacy and Control
- Features that rely on data are clearly disclosed and optional.
- Users retain full control through Roblox’s own privacy settings, which we strictly honor.
- We do not bypass, exploit, or attempt to circumvent platform safeguards.
On AEGIS’s Official Bot (Walac / Sibly)
It is deeply ironic that AEGIS has chosen to attack Insurrection over fabricated privacy concerns while their own official bot, Sibly, engages in invasive tracking practices.
- Walac’s bot, an official AEGIS tool, reportedly:
- Tracks users even when Roblox privacy settings are enabled.
- Logs in-game activity such as joins and leaves without user consent.
- Does not provide users a meaningful way to opt out, disable tracking, or request data removal.
- Continues tracking even when users explicitly ask not to be monitored.
These actions violate Roblox’s privacy model, and based on how this data is obtained, may also breach Roblox’s Terms of Service and applicable laws.
Yet, despite this, AEGIS has taken no accountability for their own bot. Meanwhile, they are punishing Insurrection unjustly for privacy practices that are fully transparent, consent-based, and limited to public data.
Insurrection exists to support the Day of Dusk community, not to exploit it. Your trust matters to us, and every system we have built was designed with privacy, transparency, and restraint. The proactive deletion of all user data, public clarification of our practices, and steadfast refusal to engage in invasive tracking demonstrate that commitment clearly.