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5 yr. ago

Privacy @lemmy.ml

Your TV set has become a digital billboard. And it’s only getting worse.

  • It's been years since the civil war so of course he's not going to be in military uniform

  • World News @lemmy.ml

    NTV Kenya: Inside the wave of abductions linked to anti-tax protests

    Privacy @lemmy.ml

    Hacker Accesses Internal ‘Tile’ Tool That Provides Location Data to Cops

    Privacy @lemmy.ml

    How secure is Secure Erase (EACAS)?

    politics @lemmy.world

    Last week's legislative brawl and our new book

  • That more than likely exists although albeit it's dropped for other things as well

  • Libre Culture @lemmy.ml

    Open Source, Supply Chains, and Bears (oh my!)

    Privacy @lemmy.ml

    Android 15 may let you control when your location is shared with carriers

    Security @lemmy.ml

    SIM swappers hijacking phone numbers in eSIM attacks

    Programming @programming.dev

    Eight years of organizing tech meetups | notes.eatonphil.com

    Technology @lemmy.world

    Read the Roon

    Privacy @lemmy.ml

    EFF Statement on Nevada's Attack on End-to-End Encryption

    Technology @lemmy.world

    ChinaTalk - India's Chip War

    General Programming Discussion @lemmy.ml

    The Death of Voice Has Been Greatly Exaggerated

    Linux @lemmy.ml

    The Berkeley Software Distribution

    Privacy @lemmy.ml

    How Android Wallpaper Images Can Threaten Your Privacy

    Privacy @lemmy.ml

    Backdoors that let cops decrypt messages violate human rights, EU court says

    Privacy @lemmy.ml

    Privacy implications of accelerometer data

    Linux @lemmy.ml

    The History of Debian, Part 1

    Privacy @lemmy.ml

    iPhone apps abuse iOS push notifications to collect user data

  • You could buy a pixel 3 or even lower with the lowest storage possible to run lineageos to test if it suits your needs

  • Security @lemmy.ml

    Widespread Weak Keys in Network Devices - factorable.net

  • The twilight princess one is pretty good too

  • I get that and I'm saying it's available to use rn for you to dissect and I feel like if you have such strong opinions about it the very least you could do is put your money where you mouth is and test out the network and outline all it's flaws so the community can reason about it instead of going hurr durr it's bad I hate it

  • They make extremely strong claims, and strong claims require strong proof. I do not see such proof anywhere. What I see is that they play fast and loose with website visitor privacy and seem to focus mainly on token hyping.

    All the claims against tor and i2p are discussed in numerous academic papers and are acknowledged by the developers themselves not sure about the other projects putting that aside the network is in production rn so you could always test it and do a full writeup on all the flaws for everyone to see and discuss.Telling persons why they've decided to use tokens and not rely on pure altruism is not token hyping.

  • so you gonna comment on their comparison or nah?

  • This is “privacy for the rich” model. Unsurprisingly: poor people can’t push the token to the moon! And looking at their website it is clear they focus more on hyping the token than on actual privacy.

    "Tokens will be used to reward those who put stake into the Nym ecosystem by providing services, such as operating a mixnode or validators for the Nym blockchain. Users discover service providers and attributes a service provider needs. Users may pay service providers outside of Nym directly. Alternatively, users may pay the mixnet fees directly or services may pay for or stake NYM tokens on behalf of a pool of users in order to provide services without cost to users."

    It’s fascinating how they talk down Tor (“because Tor does not add timing obfuscation or cover traffic to obscure the traffic patterns in circuits”), but fail to mention i2p which solves these issues without the need for bollockschain tokens. Makes sense — Nym seems to basically be i2p with a blockchain token bolted onto it so that it can become an investment vehicle.So either they did not know about i2p, an important and reasonably well known project which has been around for almost 20 years and is very clearly in the same problem space, or they intentionally decided not to mention it because it would make them look bad. Take your pick: are they ignorant, or disingenuous? Either is a great trait for a project that aims at protecting privacy from the NSA, no less.

    " I2P (‘Invisible Internet Project’) replaces Tor’s directory authority with a distributed hash table for routing. How to design a secure and private distributed hash table is still an open research question, and I2P is open to a number of attacks that isolate, misdirect, or deanonymize users. Like Tor, I2P is based on ‘security by obscurity’, where it is assumed that no adversary can watch the entire network. While security by obscurity may have been cutting-edge at the turn of the millennium, such an approach is rapidly showing its age.Nym’s cutting-edge mixnet design guarantees network anonymity and resistance to surveillance even in the face of powerful deanonymizing attacks. Unlike I2P, Nym adds decoy traffic and timing obfuscation. Rather than a centralized directory authority or distributed hash table, Nym uses blockchain technology and economic incentives to decentralize its network.The Nym mixnet can anonymize metadata even against government agencies or private companies who can monitor network links and observe the incoming and outgoing traffic of all clients and servers." Source: https://get3xnymtech.net/docs/stable/overview/index.html. Full in depth blog post comparing it against tor, vpns , i2p and other solutions in the space https://blog.nymtech.net/vpns-tor-i2p-how-does-nym-compare-8576824617b8

  • Can you at least read their whitepaper and make a fully informed decision instead of hoping for their downfall

  • Why would anyone want any hegemon at all? No to China No to US No to any other world power