I have had a very bad experience with Mailfence where emails from well-known domains do not arrive (no, not even in spam) and I never got any response from their support when I asked for their assistance to receive 2FA codes that I needed. Also, Indeed emails consistently show up in the spam folder, no matter how many times I mark them “not a spam”. Sure, I may not be a paying customer but why offer a free tier if you cannot provide a reliable service? This has caused problems for me and if I had known beforehand I would have went somewhere else.
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CedarA64@lemm.eeto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Firefox now has Terms of Use! This'll go over like a lead balloonEnglish3·3 months agoGeminispace is awesome. The (design of the) Gemini protocol ensures that it is immune to many of the issues that plague the web today.
CedarA64@lemm.eeto Privacy@lemmy.ml•A privacy dilemma from a developer: user freedom, or individual privacy?English41·3 months agoI think it is naïve to assume that your product and vision would replace the existing commercial products and law enforcement strategies. IMHO, it is more likely this will simply end up existing alongside the stuff the exists today and what that means is that less powerful people and organizations now will also have access to this technology and will now be able to abuse it for a variety of motivations and agendas alongside the powerful organizations that are already abusing it (to some degree) today. In other words, IMO proliferation of this technology is not going to end up being anywhere close to a net positive.
CedarA64@lemm.eeto Privacy@lemmy.ml•LibreWolf is to Firefox what BetterBird is to Thunderbird?English1·3 months agoNo issues with the flatpak version on OpenSUSE Leap with KDE Wayland either.
I would rather put my trust in a good VPN provider than the big CAs. And HTTPS only and DoH is not going to protect you from fingerprinting using your IP address.
If you want to defend against fingerprinting, you should use multiple browsers to segment your browsing activity, not depend on one browser to have some kind of Wunderwaffen against fingerprinting. The idea is to not have your real identity tied to parts of your browsing activity that you want to keep private.
Personally, I do use Vivaldi as one of my browsers. I use it for accessing Apple services (e.g. iCloud Drive and Mail), but it is not one of my main browsers.
CedarA64@lemm.eeto Privacy@lemmy.ml•BraX3: the most privacy-friendly smartphone!English1·3 months agoHow is LineageOS without all the Google spyware not significantly different from a regular Google Android phone, of which you in the US at least cannot even unlock the bootloader of, let alone install an official Lineage OS port? Also, this is a $300 device, not a $1000 one. Just because you can buy a Pixel and, if you make sure you buy the correct one at least, can unlock the bootloader and install a custom ROM if you have the skills and knowledge (and time) to do so, does not make this phone a “scam”.
CedarA64@lemm.eeto Privacy@lemmy.ml•apparently startpage\startmail has an exclusive partnership with Dan Bongino??English11·3 months agoIt is kind of relevant that he has some relevant experience for becoming the deputy director of the FBI. Now, some people don’t like cops, the FBI or his politics, but that’s a different discussion entirely.
CedarA64@lemm.eeto Privacy@lemmy.ml•BraX3: the most privacy-friendly smartphone!English2·3 months agoThere is a big difference between a product that is sold at a substantial premium and an actual scam. A scam would be someone selling some cheap Chinese phone rebranded as a privacy phone without any significant differences from a regular Google Android at $1000. This is clearly not that.
CedarA64@lemm.eeto Privacy@lemmy.ml•BraX3: the most privacy-friendly smartphone!English2·3 months agoYes, but where can you buy that Y28s with an AOSP ROM out of the box? Can you even install an AOSP ROM on it? Furthermore, those Asian phones likely will not work with US VoLTE. The whole point of this phone is that it is a solution for people who do not want to deal with flashing another ROM and want something that “just works”. Rob Braxman also sells Pixels with AOSP ROMs (previously CalyxOS, now something else, I believe). The point is not getting the best value or the most revolutionary or amazing device ever.
CedarA64@lemm.eeto Privacy@lemmy.ml•German Prosecutors Think It’s Funny People’s Homes Are Being Raided And Their Devices Seized Because They Said Stuff On The InternetEnglish5·3 months agoImagine if half of liberal America was prosecuted for calling Trump “orange cheeto” or saying he has small hands. WTF is this even.
CedarA64@lemm.eeto Privacy@lemmy.ml•German Prosecutors Think It’s Funny People’s Homes Are Being Raided And Their Devices Seized Because They Said Stuff On The InternetEnglish165·3 months agoSo just because people you don’t like express concern about something means that it automatically must be false? This type of “logic” is very dangerous. And prosecution clearly does happen a lot. Literally 10 cases a day in one German state according to the article and only 0.5 of those cases actually result in conviction, which means that clearly this is used to intimidate and punish people generally rather than a sincere attempt to enforce the law.
CedarA64@lemm.eeto Privacy@lemmy.ml•German Prosecutors Think It’s Funny People’s Homes Are Being Raided And Their Devices Seized Because They Said Stuff On The InternetEnglish191·3 months agoThe article focuses on Lower Saxony, which is in West Germany. These cases are not about inciting violence or denying a genocide but about saying something about a politician that that person doesn’t like. Many American liberals would be prosecuted under these laws right now for the stuff that is said on e.g. Reddit, presumably BlueSky and Lemmy.world. Reminder that this sort of stuff also affects pro-Palestine activists and in fact from what I gather that is in fact the case in Germany today.
CedarA64@lemm.eeto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Recommended me a good private email providerEnglish4·3 months agoSwitzerland is not in the EU.
CedarA64@lemm.eeto Privacy@lemmy.ml•The home page of my $1700 smart TV has a full page ad about watching adsEnglish9·4 months agoDon’t buy a TV anymore. Seriously though with the direction things have been going in the “tech world” for the last couple years (maybe even decade) it is probably better to start adjusting to some level of digital minimalism. For some of us it will become a necessity for financial reasons anyway…
You got some pretty decent responses already but hopefully I add some useful information. You don’t have to study computer science theory at all to be private. You don’t even have to learn how to code, let alone to develop software. And I say this as someone who learned how to code in high school and took some CS courses in college as well as the required calculus courses. It is simply overkill and frankly you are doing yourself a disservice if you are focusing on that stuff if your sole priority is to be private digitally. Maybe it could eventually be useful to learn some bash or Python/Ruby/Lua/JS scripting but you sure as hell do not have to start with learning C.
If you just want to have some privacy in general you can start with dealing with some of the worst offenders, but really the best thing to do is to threat model first. What that means is identifying what/who you are concerned about. Who is really your opposition? Is it a specific Big Tech company (maybe your “evil ex” works there), all/most of (American) Big Tech, a certain government (agency) (which government/country), some unhinged and tech savvy stalker, organized crime or an oligarch? Or some combination of the aforementioned? You really need to figure this out first to be effective. Don’t get caught in the trap of trying to defend your privacy against everyone. And remember that privacy and (cyber)security are not the same thing. A Pixel with stock ROM or Chromebook is very secure but not private at all from Google. Conversely, you can have some 10 year old computer with original UEFI firmware running a Linux distribution that hasn’t received security updates in 5 years with the best configuration and practices for privacy from Google. That would be very private from Google but absolutely not secure.
Also avoid the trap of simply adopting what someone else says is “the best”. What is “the best” (assuming that that is even objectively true in that particular case) for one person may not be a good option for someone else at all. What is the best option depends on your threat model and what compromises you need/want to make.
I would recommend checking out Rob Braxman’s channel (on YouTube, or preferably Rumble or Odysee). Not saying he is the end all be all but at the very least he can teach you about the importance of browser isolation. If you want to defend against (American) Big Tech (and/or their partners) you need to understand how their tracking works.
Regarding the Optiplex, I would check out the 3050 micro (it can be Libreboot’ed); they are pretty cheap on eBay. You don’t necessarily have to buy a ThinkPad, there are a lot of options with good Linux compatibility (many business computers optionally came with Linux preinstalled even, not just ThinkPads or Lenovos). Just do not buy an HP (I used to like and own them) as you cannot permanently disable Absolute Persistence on them. Don’t know about more niche brands but you can at least generally with Lenovo and Dell.
CedarA64@lemm.eeto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Do P2P Messaging apps that don't require the internet exist?English1·4 months agoIt’s not owned by Meta and it’s relatively well-known. It’s older than Signal.
Seems like it is only for Europeans (and possibly even excluding non-EU citizens)? I have been using Zoho (free account) for many years (since I got rid of GMail) and while not explicitly privacy-focused they are not a data collection operation like Google/Alphabet or Meta. They make their money through providing paid accounts to businesses (competing with Google Suite). I have been very satisfied with them. They provide very good 2FA options and apps and I also use their WorkDrive (previously Docs) and Notebook.
I don’t really understand the logic, but there are plenty of reasons to not be using Google Maps, so I will give my two cents.
I have had the best luck with MagicEarth. I still use Google Maps sometimes when I need to use the most reliable navigation or if MagicEarth can’t find something. When I was driving professionally I found out that sometimes MagicEarth (OSM) got residential addresses right when Google Maps did not but also vice versa. I have used HERE Maps (HereWeGo) in the past and also tried OSMAnd.
Will they actually work with US carriers (VoLTE)?