It should go without saying, but Vector takes the privacy of your data, including how you use Vector, very seriously. Vector collects and routes some of your most sensitive data, and therefore, Vector strives to be as transparent as possible with our privacy efforts. This document clarifies how the Vector project thinks about privacy now and in the future.
Vector uses AWS S3, GitHub assets, Cloudsmith, and Docker Hub to host release artifacts. Vector does track download counts in aggregate. For GitHub, Cloudsmith, and Docker this data is anonymous, but for AWS S3 IP addresses are logged. There is no way to disable IP address tracking within the AWS S3 logs. If you are concerned about sharing your IP address we recommend using a proxy, or downloading Vector from a different channel.
Vector will not "phone home" or communicate with an external service that you did not explicitly configure. This includes grey-area tactics such as version checks, capturing diagnostic information, and sharing crash reports.
The Vector website does collect various analytics. Aggregated analytics data is derived from backend server logs which are anonymized. Vector uses Netlify analytics for this.
The Vector repository is hosted on GitHub. You can review their privacy policy here. Additionally, Vector will not attempt to mine information about users that interact with Vector on GitHub. Vector team members will occasionally reach out to active users offer help debugging or learn about ways Vector can improve.
The Vector chat uses Discord; you can review their privacy policy here.