Tails and another for storing random stuff, like a copy of documents when travelling.
Served in the Krogan uprisings. Now I run a podcast
Tails and another for storing random stuff, like a copy of documents when travelling.
I don’t really bother much in public places, I use umbrellas when it rains and sunglasses when it is sunny, but In general I try to avoid connecting to public WiFi and always use my vpn when I do.
I dont have any identifying data on my mailbox. I make sure to destroy PII on mail.
My routine is normal, gray, boring.
Thats good to know. Thanks for sharing
Do you know if these folks actively develop it or do they just apply patches to the Firefox codebase ?
Like do they just pre configure a bunch of about config settings and the pre installed search or do they harden the binaries at compile time ?
I’ve not kept up with this but I’m curious if there is any real advantage of this over Firefox after it has been configured. If not I would stick with Firefox as it will get security updates quicker by people who know the source code intimately.
Anyway not shitting on anyone’s choices here just curious.
Both my browser and network level dns blocker blocked the test attacker site from loading but in general there are 2 approaches to this: minimize your fingerprint data points or change them to blend in with the crowd.
I think for the most part selectivly blocking js and cookies will do a lot for you. You can also block the canvas and limit fonts too. I’d also recommend a vpn as they can associate it with your ip too.
Random hackers, companies, dragnet surveillance.
The companies are probably the biggest exposure as we are forced to interact with them for utilities, flights etc . They get hacked all of the time and dont bother to secure their data.
Also as a side note I hate how lots of places just assume you want to download their shitty spyware ridden apps or hand over your phone number or an email.
They must have something to hide 🤨
Personally I would split them so they are not all in the same place. So for email use something like proton or tuta, vpn could be mullvad and a local password manager such as keepass xc synced with syncthing.
Connect it to your PC or laptop and do a netinstall. Configure SSHD and a static ip. Plugin the disk to your server and then connect via ssh to admin it.
You could also set your laptop or PC to boot from the attached disk in the bios to test the services you want to start are starting
Happy to help 😉
Syncthing can do direct sync if you give the ip address to each node and you can disable relay servers .
Imagine paying for an OS to have ads in it. 🐃💩
Thankfully we have Linux/BSD
It doesn’t matter that you can disable it, this stuff shouldn’t be in the OS in the first place
Kdeconnect works great too if you are using linux and android
I’m not sure but it is a good question and a good project if none already exists.
Looking at work history from employees of these companies on linkedin we might discover more.
I export my totp from freeotp+. I have it added to keepassxc and sync that with syncthing to multiple devices.
If I lose the phone I can just import the exports to a fresh app on another phone.
Another option is use waydroid and backup the VM
Yeah this is a much better approach
You could just poll it every few minutes via a cronjob and only send a notification if the numbers have increased.
Personally I use miniflux too in docker but I dont have a need for notifications.
Do what you can and dont let perfect be the enemy of good. You’re still ahead of the rest of the crowd who don’t give a shit.