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4 mo. ago

  • Nothing in life takes no effort. I'm only advocating on the basis that Windows has become more of an effort to stick with than Linux has become to learn.

  • ... everything else in your workflow will work immediately with no research needed.

    I'll put it simply for you: You can spend a few hours figuring out a new workflow, or you can spend the rest of your life fighting a losing battle against a megacorporation that has it out for you that will also randomly upend on your workflow.

  • it's so fucking true

    Anytime they pull you into an argument, suddenly 5 more show up to try and overwhelm you. There's no way it isn't a deliberate tactic.

  • Long live the Linux phone.

  • I may have misunderstood, but Google isn't doing Android behind closed doors; it's just development. The released versions will still be as open as they are now, as far as I've understood.

  • Man I'm not going to dive into it but this reads like a FUD piece and I know the article explicitly calls out people who dismiss evidence as FUD, but please read just the first point that 'Tor is compromised':

    the agency has worked on several methods that, if successful, would allow the NSA to uncloak anonymous traffic

    If succesful, implying that they haven't been. I'd love to read the paper but I'm European and they block me from clicking it, citing GDPR issues :-)

    promised to reveal how a $3,000 piece of kit could unmask the IP addresses of Tor hidden services as well as their users.

    a much anticipated talk at the Black Hat hacking conference was abruptly canceled.

    The university cancelled the speech and cited no reasons but I can think of several legal ones even if the device didn't work. No proof.

    the FBI is able to de-anonymize Tor users and discover their real IP address remains classified information. In a 2017 court case, the FBI refused to divulge how it was able to do this,

    I can fly. No, I don't have to prove it.

  • What is a 'scene' in this context?

  • I've found a few exposed /metrics for kubernetes stuff because their IP poked my honeypot. I'd assume they've been hacked and turned into a botnet or something.

  • Zingers are lame and boring. Elaborate or go

  • Meshtastic
    BOINC
    Tor
    I2P

    Just off the top of my head. Meshtastic is probably the most similar to Helium but I don't know what Helium is and their landing page makes me not want to. BOINC supports projects not in the official lists, just google around.

  • Anubis is provided to the public for free in order to help advance the common good. In return, we ask (but not demand, these are words on the internet, not word of law) that you not remove the Anubis character from your deployment.
    If you want to run an unbranded or white-label version of Anubis, please contact Xe to arrange a contract.

    This is icky to me. Cool idea, but this is weird.

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  • You can boil the logic down and apply it however you want. The fact is that different people have different levels of tolerance for bullshit and VPN users are a large source of it. TOR is also inherently harmless but exit nodes end up on banlists everywhere because malicious users use them to the point that exit nodes are pre-emptively banned in a lot of places because some people just don't wanna deal with it. The big email providers have a zero-tolerance policy for the same reason; if your domain misbehaves even once then you're on the shit-list forever because it's not worth playing whack-a-mole with malicious actors.

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  • Because shared VPNs are also used by malicious actors and some admins just don't care about dealing with that.

  • Linux is truly extensible and it is the part I both love and struggle to explain the most.
    I can sit at my desktop, developing code that physically resides on my server and interact with it from my laptop. This does not require any strange janky setup, it's just SSH. It's extensible.

  • Any file manager on Linux supports this

  • I just type sftp://[ip, domain or SSH alias] into my file manager and browse it as a regular folder

  • That doesn't really change that it's one company hosting it. Unless you're willing to make 10 different accounts because your super-FOSS friends aren't willing to join each others instances?

  • Have you tried? Because Proton is the miracle people make it up to be.

  • Yeah, I know! Don't say that too loud, though. Proton and Tuta are the precious baby boys who can do no wrong in most "privacy" communities.