Most people haven’t, till they have.
- 0 Posts
- 14 Comments
For security, Vanadium (only available on GrapheneOS. For privacy, Tor. Most everything else falls between on the scale.
FutileRecipe@lemmy.worldto memes@lemmy.world•If one was available, would conservatives take a vaccine against the woke mind virus?5·9 days agodeleted by creator
FutileRecipe@lemmy.worldto Privacy@lemmy.ml•ProtonVPN or Mullvad? Why would you choose one over another?3·10 days agoWhen was that, apparently I missed that.
A quick search says November 2019.
FutileRecipe@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Crunchyroll Faces Cancelation: Why Anime Fans Are Choosing Piracy After Latest UpdateEnglish4·11 days agoStremio + Torrentio is the way to go.
Torrentio has started blocking VPNs.
The sheer volume of communication data is far too large to monitor everything.
By people, sure. Run it through a magical analytical algorithm that flags stuff for people to look? Or if that’s still too much everywhere, they could focus it on a certain area’s towers and process that data. Will it catch everything or not generate false positives? No, it’s not perfect, but I could see it helping them and being done.
I doubt an agency like this would just hoard the info and not proactively use.
Even a lot of offices have moved to VoIP.
FutileRecipe@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft launches ‘vibe working’ in Excel and WordEnglish41·13 days agoDepending on where you go to school, 70% is passing while 50% is not. While “not far off,” one is a C, the other a F.
FutileRecipe@lemmy.worldto Android@lemdro.id•OnePlus devices have a big SMS vulnerability, but a patch is finally on the wayEnglish3·13 days agoSMS is mostly used for 2-factor authentication, transaction status.
Which they really shouldn’t as it’s still in the clear. But banks are slow to change, especially if it costs them money. As for mostly, I think it depends on the region. I think I’ve read that the US, Canada, and a few (not all) European countries still use SMS.
I use Signal, which is widely considered the gold standard for E2EE apps, with the client app of Molly specifically (a hardened version of Signal).
FutileRecipe@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Austria's Armed Forces Gets Rid of Microsoft Office (Mostly) for LibreOfficeEnglish5·13 days agothey overspend by millions
Because everyone needs their cut.
either way a military tank is better than a civilian grade sedan.
Because they’re two different vehicles, not two different classes of product. If you compare military grade phones to civilian phones, the civilian would be better, and probably cheaper due to not having the buzzwords attached. And I bet a tank made by a private firm for non-government entities would in fact be better and cheaper than a military tank.
FutileRecipe@lemmy.worldto Android@lemdro.id•OnePlus devices have a big SMS vulnerability, but a patch is finally on the wayEnglish4·14 days agoI’m not downplaying it or saying it shouldn’t be fixed, but…
Effectively, due to modifications made to the standard Telephony package left the app open to abuse, allowing any installed application on an affected OnePlus device to access SMS and MMS data, along with metadata, “without permission, user interaction, or consent.”
Just another vector. SMS is already plaintext/unencrypted, so shouldn’t be used unless you’re saying something you’re comfortable with the world knowing. Switch to E2EE apps
FutileRecipe@lemmy.worldto Android@lemdro.id•Let's talk security: Answering your top questions about Android developer verificationEnglish10·14 days agoIt’s the whole “if a fine is less than the profit, the fine is just considered a cost of business.”
I would like something in between…BTW I’m installing Bazzyte on another PC.
If you’re somewhat familiar with uBlue, Bazzite, and immutables, I’d go with Bluefin (Gnome) or Aurora (KDE). All three are uBlue / based off Fedora, so you don’t have to learn a 2nd OS while working on your current OS (Bazzite).
FutileRecipe@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Google's shocking developer decree struggles to justify the urgent threat to F-DroidEnglish15·16 days agoThese things will very likely not work on non-proprietary devices.
Depends on your bank. Most work on alternate OS (like GrapheneOS), and of course some don’t. https://privsec.dev/posts/android/banking-applications-compatibility-with-grapheneos/
If an app (especially bank) doesn’t work, I forward them this and try to ELI5 that their current method is flawed and less secure: https://grapheneos.org/articles/attestation-compatibility-guide
Using one only because it’s super well known? Sure. It can be well known and scummy. But it can also be well known, trusted, vetted, etc.
And you also probably don’t want to use one that is barely known as there’s the lack of trust, getting, who runs it’s, etc.