CoyoteFacts

joined 2 weeks ago
[–] CoyoteFacts@piefed.ca 3 points 16 hours ago* (last edited 16 hours ago) (1 children)

Mailbox.org is a good pick to consider IMO. You can read some comparisons on PrivacyGuides, which I also recommend as a starting point for these sorts of topics. The mailbox.org web UI is not great, but it allows IMAP/SMTP access, so I use Thunderbird on both desktop and Android in order to interact with my inbox. My inbox is auto-encrypted with PGP using their Mailbox Guard thing, so my emails are all encrypted garbage on the web UI anyway. Mailbox.org only allows paid-for accounts, but considering the annoying stuff that Proton and Tuta do to their free accounts I'd rather just be honest about the service I'm getting. It allows auto-forwarding directly in the web UI, but given that you can hook up to it with IMAP anyway, it's not like you couldn't just do it yourself.

(Also, as another comment said I also recommend DuckDuckGo's Email Protection for email aliasing if you need it.)

[–] CoyoteFacts@piefed.ca 4 points 16 hours ago (1 children)

The straw that broke the camel's back for me is the CEO's icky tweet about how great Republicans are for your privacy and how they stand up for the little guys (what), which they doubled down on using the official Reddit Proton account. There's already been a ton of discussion about this on the internet if you care to look for more angles on it.

But before that I'd already grown quite leery of them for their trend of endlessly starting new services before the old ones are polished, along with trying to push everyone into their walled garden and endlessly using naggy popups in the UI about it. Worst of all, they have a clear trend of not giving a damn about Linux support, sometimes giving up on certain features for their Linux clients or releasing the clients way after the Windows/Mac versions. For a "privacy company", not putting Linux as a first-class citizen is really just unacceptable, and they've been around for long enough that it's clearly a trend and not a fluke. To me, Proton just feels like a wannabe version of Apple. Its continued actions give me the feeling that it exists to serve itself, not its users.

[–] CoyoteFacts@piefed.ca 2 points 19 hours ago (1 children)

This was engaging and very informative for such a small piece of trivia. Will I ever use or remember this knowledge after today? Unlikely. Perfect.

[–] CoyoteFacts@piefed.ca 6 points 20 hours ago (3 children)

I don't support Proton for other reasons, but I'll note that if anyone is having this problem you can use a half-measure of setting your other email address as a recovery email and enabling "daily email notifications", which will email you once a day if there's unread stuff in your Proton mailbox.

 
[–] CoyoteFacts@piefed.ca 11 points 21 hours ago* (last edited 21 hours ago) (1 children)

Oh. I'm not sure where to host images then; I know that when lemm.ee closed literally all the images that were posted with lemm.ee vanished. It gives me pause to build up the same thing again.

Edit: I switched it to lemmy.ca as a host. (I'm not sure if PieFed allows uploading images without creating a new post in the same way that Lemmy does.)

[–] CoyoteFacts@piefed.ca 13 points 21 hours ago

I'm a big fan of btop, and probably a big chunk of that is that the default configuration is useful and very easy to understand. I can't be bothered to spend hours configuring a monitoring app and learning obscure keyboard shortcuts to navigate it; if I'm opening a system monitor it's because I want info, not because I want to live in it.

92
submitted 21 hours ago* (last edited 21 hours ago) by CoyoteFacts@piefed.ca to c/furry_irl@pawb.social
 

Source (Bluesky)

[–] CoyoteFacts@piefed.ca 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

You can still use it as a target for a more sophisticated backup solution though, like borg. Borg handles the versioning, integrity, and encryption, so online backup can just be used as dumb storage location. If the online backup deletes your data or locks you out, just use your other copies to recreate the backup into another dumb online storage. In this way, your online backup target doesn't have to be very reliable, as long as it doesn't fail at the exact same time as your other backups.

[–] CoyoteFacts@piefed.ca 6 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I'm not sure how much actual effort it takes to make sure Plasma keeps compiling for X11, but based on the wording from the blog post it sounds like they're exerting pretty much as little effort as possible. I would say with the recent uptick in leading-edge distros moving to Wayland it's only a matter of time before almost no one is left on X11, which will deprioritize it even further. Pulling the plug on X11 today is premature given how many people are still running it (SteamOS uses it by default, for example), but I think their ~2 year estimate sounds about right for letting off the gas and putting a hard stop on support.

[–] CoyoteFacts@piefed.ca 2 points 2 days ago

Okay, but I did just find this game, and it's a free game that I'm pretty sure already hit mega-popularity back a year ago, so I don't know what advantage astroturfing on the tiny threadiverse would serve. I've just been having fun with it today and wanted to post about it somewhere.

 

A few snippets in case you want to prevent yourself from accidentally voting on things or change your behavior with regard to being swayed by existing public opinion.

You can mix-and-match a few of these if you want to e.g. not allow any voting on posts but allow upvoting on comments or something:

/* Remove upvote and downvote buttons everywhere */  
.downvote_button, .upvote_button {  
  display: none !important;  
}  
/* Remove upvote and downvote buttons from comments */  
.comment_actions .downvote_button, .comment_actions .upvote_button {  
  display: none !important;  
}  
/* Remove upvote and downvote buttons from posts */  
.post_utilities_bar .downvote_button, .post_utilities_bar .upvote_button {  
  display: none !important;  
}  
/* Remove downvote buttons everywhere */  
.downvote_button {  
  display: none !important;  
}  
/* Remove downvote buttons from comments */  
.comment_actions .downvote_button {  
  display: none !important;  
}  
/* Remove downvote buttons from posts */  
.post_utilities_bar .downvote_button {  
  display: none !important;  
}  

And in another category, removing score counts:

/* Remove score displays everywhere */  
.score {  
  display: none !important;  
}  
/* Remove score displays from posts */  
.post_utilities_bar .score {  
  display: none !important;  
}  
/* Remove score displays from comments */  
.comment_actions .score {  
  display: none !important;  
}  
[–] CoyoteFacts@piefed.ca 5 points 2 days ago

Also consider that you're adding another party that you need to trust to the chain, and also adding another point of failure if iodéOS stops releasing.

[–] CoyoteFacts@piefed.ca 9 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (4 children)

I've been using this a lot lately, and it's been great after a bit of a learning curve. It even incorporates some of the functionality from the addons and userscripts that I needed for YouTube, like getting rid of clickbait titles/thumbnails and blocking specific channels. Since you never really have a tracking profile when using YouTube this way, it's very obvious when YouTube is trying to shoe-horn in political channels and clickbait, and you can just continually keep blocking those channels in the recommended section until you get all of them. I'm still missing a way to boost the volume on certain videos that are too quiet for me, though. I use LibRedirect to auto-open YouTube links in FreeTube. FreeTube has occasionally broken because of YouTube API updates, which requires them to figure out the problem and push a new FreeTube release (which could take a day or more), but other than that I'm fairly happy with it.

[–] CoyoteFacts@piefed.ca 2 points 3 days ago

I don't have any experience with iCloud Private Relay, but I'd be surprised if enabling it will make you un-fingerprintable (in which case what are you really trying to accomplish by using it?). Also, who are you trying to stay private from? Do you personally believe that Apple and/or Cloudflare aren't selling or trading your data? Would you be okay with them being the only ones that control your data if they're not selling it? It's a nuanced topic, and likely you're the only one that can answer your position on that. It's cliché, but defining a threat model can help a lot with deciding how many conveniences you are okay with giving up. I would likely argue that an Android phone with LineageOS can be made more private than an iPhone, but at the cost of security. Does your threat model need to sacrifice privacy for security?

Regarding iPhone vs Android, I've only ever used Android, but my friends with iPhones and Macs never seem to have access to the open-source software that I use and recommend, so I feel like that's a big part to consider also. You'll get roped into a proprietary ecosystem where it seems like every little app is trying to charge you money and won't show you what it's doing behind the scenes. If you already have an iPhone I'd understand if you need to weigh the economic feasibility of buying an entire new phone just for privacy as well.

Personally, I don't really trust anything unless I'm given infallible reason to trust it, e.g. cryptographic proofs, audits, zero-trust models etc.; in this world it seems inevitable that someone will take advantage of your trust either today or tomorrow. If someone is truly on your side, they will do everything they can to take the need to trust them out of the equation, and failing that they should make it as clear as they can what trust is still mandatory and why. If you want to trust someone that doesn't meet these standards, you do so basically at your own risk, and you'll have to start doing some mental calculus on what they could get from you, what they might want it for, and how eager you think they would be to start misusing it (e.g., if you pay for a service, the servicer may feel less compelled to subsidize their income by selling your data).

10
submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by CoyoteFacts@piefed.ca to c/piefed_meta@piefed.social
 

EDIT: Initial self-votes don't federate, so it seems this specific way doesn't work.

Am I missing something, or is Piefed's private voting kinda trivial to reverse engineer as long as every user by default upvotes every post and comment they make?

If you have a username and want to find the matching private voting ID, search through that user's posts and comments for an entry that only has one upvote. The vote cast on that entry will be the private voting ID.

If you have a private voting ID and want to find the matching username, search through all votes cast by the private voting ID to find a post/comment that only has one upvote. The user that posted that entry will be the original user.

If it really is this easy, it seems like it's sort of a false sense of security. On the other hand, if automatic upvoting of your own content could be disabled by default, that would prevent this from working.

 

Hello, I just spent like 5 minutes trying to figure this out and figured this might be a common question, so just posting the answer here for posterity. If PieFed hasn't seen the community before you can add it by navigating to Topics -> All Communities -> Add Remote Community.

It seems like unseen communities don't automatically get added when you try to migrate your user JSON, so be careful to add any remote communities that are missing.

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