MasterBuilder

joined 2 years ago
[–] MasterBuilder@lemmy.one 1 points 2 months ago

I'll review again. Last time I looked was 3 to 4 years ago.

I'm sticking with Proton for now. If Switzerland ends up being no different than the 5 eyes, I'll be more intent on finding a replacement.

[–] MasterBuilder@lemmy.one 1 points 2 months ago

Well, what unlockable options are there? I certainly accept that I might not be keyed into everything. Fairphone is the only one i recall.

Please, don't just snark. Enlighten me.

[–] MasterBuilder@lemmy.one -1 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Well, take a look at LineageOS and the associated microg edition. They work on dozens of devices. I've been flashing ROM's since the first Android phone and I'm still using my Pixel 2XL, degoogled. I still have my Moto X 2013 {with custim, now unusable ROM} because it is like a river rock. It feels great to hold.

Google phones have always been unlockable - primarily for the benefit of developers.

Calyx also offers a degoogled Android, focused on privacy like Graphene.

If one wants a phone and own it, Google is the only sure way right now.

[–] MasterBuilder@lemmy.one 1 points 2 months ago

Is 50 too late?

[–] MasterBuilder@lemmy.one 1 points 2 months ago (8 children)

Tutonota is German, which is part of the already full on surveilance state.

[–] MasterBuilder@lemmy.one 2 points 2 months ago

I'm guessing his/her point involves the location of its incorporation. Any company in the "five eyes" zone can be forced to release details about its users to any member state. One must evaluate whether NordVPN keeps anything more than a few hours - days tops - to decide if it is "safe enough". I was worried enough about this particular point that I chose a VPN that is not in any way beholden to five eyes or the fourteen eyes, which is a similar agreement.

Proton caught heat because of its release of information to the local law enforcement recently. While Switzerland is not part of the five eyes, it does have its own laws requiring a reveal in certain circumstances. I forgot the details, but I think they had an IP address that had not yet been wiped from cache, and that was enough to pinpoint the hackers being sought.

In truth, there's no sure way to be sure. One still must trust the organization is both honest and competent enough to properly wipe any residual information. No matter who it is, some amount of information has to be in cache for some time in order to be able to deliver the service, and there also needs something tracking the workings of the system to ensure it isn't overloaded or to find opportunities to improve it.

[–] MasterBuilder@lemmy.one 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

Je suis desolee - Je ne comprends pas l’espagnol. Parlez-vous francais ou l’anglais ? ;)

[–] MasterBuilder@lemmy.one 2 points 2 months ago

I'll pick them up in the tax-free section of the airport! :)

[–] MasterBuilder@lemmy.one 1 points 2 months ago

Both. Sure, the actual exchange might be made-up. The problem is that it's entirely plausible it is real. I've seen this kind of exchange happen on video (which of course could also be made up). It's common for television shows to do stories on what the "person on the street" knows about some topic. For local news stories, it's usually to showcase how poorly educated "the youths" are today.

Periodically a reporter will go to a public place and showcase how people answer questions that arguably should be fairly easy to answer with an elementary school education or if they check in with some news source regularly and actually understand the topic. The worst ones are where they are "confidently incorrect".

Jimmy Kimmel does this regularly for laughs. I've seen several examples going back decades from various local news programs. In all cases, I'm confident they are showing the 10% of interviewees that were the most clueless, and not showing the other 90%. Still, the level of cluelessness on the ones they do show is often truly frightening.

[–] MasterBuilder@lemmy.one 1 points 2 months ago

That is what i was referencing with my comment.

[–] MasterBuilder@lemmy.one 2 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Yeah, i know. See my other reply from moments ago. I've never heard the term "ugly Canadian" or railing against their imperialist culture abroad. I've seen some latent sense of superiority over them (especially wrt frankophones) but not outright hatred. They aren't treated like a threat, from my limited experience, and that was before our government went Fascist.

[–] MasterBuilder@lemmy.one 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I didn't intend to do that. I realize you also have a growing right-wing that is on the same page as ours, and there are other excesses, along with insane housing issues.

I also feel like the ire of the world is not as strongly directed at you. We have decadea of negative stereotypes. It comes from being "in your face" for so long and having such outsize influence in the world.

I remember encountering several negative ideas during my term abroad in Europe during college and was very careful to avoid reinforcing any of them.

 

I use openvpn to connect to my server at home. When I surf the Internet or any of my apps on my phone go to the Internet while I'm on the VPN it's going out to the internet from my server.

Does anybody know a way to set it up so that whatever goes out from that server goes through expressvpn? I can't seem to get it to work on the router because openvpn then cannot connect to my server.

 

Hello. I am having trouble finding a video I own on VHS format. I want to get a digital copy, but it probably does not exist. I think there are rules against asking about particular titles, so I'll just state the topic. It's about skills used by guides for camping in the wilderness between north central US and Canada. Are there any places might have such videos?

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