From a tech perspective, it looks promising. In theory, your privacy will be, at very worst, only as bad as the most private actor in a two-hop chain.
In practice, though, Mullvad seems relatively okay with offering a white label version of its services to anybody who asks. And there's a plus side there, because it means anybody who subscribes to that other service will be part of a larger crowd of Mullvad users in general. And blending in with the crowd is a good way of staying obscured.
Seeing the perspective of somebody who's not particularly well versed in Android forks is interesting, though.
I found the part around 2:45 to be interesting, where the YouTuber says the thought of the OS getting compromised was scary. This is a sort of privacy paradox where Calyx looks worse than other, less honest, alternatives.
Could a rouge employee compromise Calyx? I guess, but Calyx has the best possible setup to avoid it. And Android itself is basically compromised by default, which should be far more concerning. The biggest reason people aren't concerned is because Google understands PR, and they know how to spin things in the most positive light possible.
The best service I'm aware of is archive.is, which has been around for at least a decade, and does a good job taking snapshots of pages the way they've rendered. Beggars can't be choosers, though, and the alternatives are sparse. (Their site does recommend a couple others, though.)
Typically I would prefer The Web Archive, but currently their site is experiencing issues with Twitter URLs.
For clarification, is there a reason you would prefer xcancel links in particular over other frontends? I'm entirely uninformed on the matter, outside of seeing this service used relatively often and recently, compared to other Nitter instances.
I'm not the person you asked, but in my opinion, archiving services are more reliable than simple frontends, since they will continue to work even if the tweet in question is from an account that deletes or protects the tweets later, or if the account is suspended by Twitter. Considering the tumultuous relationship Twitter has with both reality and its users, this might be worth consideration too.
This sounds like a good change! It's bound to be frustrating to a lot of people, but it's good to see protecting your passwords on their servers is the number one goal of this company.
I don't see how enabling federation will fix the problem of not knowing what is running on their servers. You've just introduced a new problem: other servers, with their own rules, which may also be peppered with requests for data and gag orders.
This change will impact how you set up Signal on your desktop computer. Previously, after linking your desktop to your phone, you would be presented with basically an empty window.
This change will allow you to, optionally, synchronize your message history from your phone to your desktop, filling it with your previous messages, making it much easier to pick up where you left off with your conversations.
Pictures and videos that were sent will also synchronize, as long as they are from the past month and a half.
Proton's CEO just hijacked the company account, wrote a bunch of stuff that said "Our team" at the beginning. Then he claimed he had accidentally used the wrong account and accidentally spoken for the entire team.
I could have been 100% on board with everything the CEO said, but then his rapid denial of obvious facts is a huge deal in itself. Proton's entire existence exists upon being trustworthy, and if somebody's going to clearly lie, trust gets broken fast.
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