privacy

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WeLoveCastingSpellz, in Question about phones: Am I overreacting?

get a cuatom rom that is privacy focussed,your concerns are valid, mostly. Though dumb phones aren’t much better

auf, in Cover Your Tracks: Test how well your browser protect you from tracking:

Here’s my result (Tested on Safari on iPad)

https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/6bf2fe5c-8039-4a74-b9fb-e9888c488f84.jpeg

mateomaui,

While everyone’s at it, you may want to check for leaks with Mullvad VPN’s service, it picked up a DNS leak for me that got past a few other sites:

edit: also ipleak.net, which tests a few other things, like torrent ips

downpunxx, in Cover Your Tracks: Test how well your browser protect you from tracking:
@downpunxx@kbin.social avatar

My impression is the thing with modern day ad tracking, selling information to spammers, and hackers is, even if you secure your browser tighter than a drum, any one of your browser extensions, which we've given permission to read all site data on every site you visit and interact with, could be keeping extensive logs on your activity and selling that away to the highest bidder. Am I understanding that right?

nottheengineer,

Yes and that’s why you stick to popular FOSS stuff.

BlanK0, in Question about phones: Am I overreacting?

I think its a bit of a overreaction, but you can always download Foss apps even if you can’t download better private OSs, its not the best but its better then nothing

swayevenly, in Comcast says hackers stole data of close to 36 million Xfinity customers

I was trying to check how many customers Comcast has and, from what I saw, 36 million is just about all of them.

possiblylinux127, in KeepassXC and KeepassDX Guide

KeepassXC is pretty user friendly. I can walk anyone through using it.

velox_vulnus, in Telecom Bill allows Centre to take over, suspend services over ‘national security’

RIP democracy, RIP privacy.

PropaGandalf, in Does it even make sense to care about privacy?

If you don’t protect yourself they will easily find you because of the information you leave everywhere, if you go full privacy mode you will stick out like a sore thumb and they will find you too but at least they don’t have much info.

miss_brainfart, in Full PGP support in Skiff
@miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml avatar

Well damn, this is great. Too many private email providers still do their own thing in terms of encryption, so that is awesome to hear

inetknght, in Largest Study of its Kind Shows Outdated Password Practices are Widespread

If a website requires so few characters that I have to create custom rule in my password manager for it… then it’s a website I’m strongly inclined not to use.

Sadly, a lot of these websites deal with finances or employment.

Pantherina, (edited )

Paypal lol. Literally my most insecure password

wincing_nucleus073,

you know what’s funny. in paypal you are not even allowed to make a secure password. they have a short character limit.

Pantherina,

Yesss my shortest Password. Fuck Paypal I only have it for weird stuff and that Indian Developer that still maintains LineageOS Android 14 for my Nokia phone

Ilandar, in Question about phones: Am I overreacting?

Yes, that is an overreaction. In my opinion, you should take your privacy precautions as far as you wish without significantly affecting your everyday life. Refusing to use your smartphone/not enjoying the experience because you are anxious about the data it is leaking suggests to me that you’ve gone too far down the rabbit hole and need to pull back a bit. There are measures you can take to increase the privacy of your smartphone, even if you can’t install an alternative operating system on it and need to use default Android. No it won’t be as private, but if the alternative is selling/returning this new gift then perhaps sacrificing some of your privacy is worth it (that’s something for you to decide).

The reality is that most people around the world have absolutely zero concern for their privacy and security and get by in life without any issues at all. It’s good to be informed and take precautions where necessary but it is statistically extremely unlikely that you will notice any negative change to your life because you choose to use a regular smartphone. Making choices about your privacy should come from a place of empowerment - you should feel good about them. If you are making choices because you are scared/paranoid, you probably need to take a step back from online communities such as this one. They can be useful sources of information but you can also get easily overwhelmed with information and/or try to change too much, too quickly and end up living and extremely paranoid and limited life. People who do this often then burn out and just give up entirely on their privacy, when a more moderate approach would have actually benefited them more long-term.

possiblylinux127, (edited ) in Full PGP support in Skiff

That’s really good. I wish PGP rotated keys but that’s a discussion for anouther day

wincing_nucleus073, in Any automated method to check for basic OPSEC mistakes whilst posting content online?

you want to do scans before the content is posted? or you want to scan existing content online that you posted?

you could self-host LanguageTool for paraphrasing capability, which would vastly reduce stylometry correlations

github.com/languagetool-org/languagetool

MigratingtoLemmy,

Thank you, I’ll take a look! That’s a great idea!

TCB13, in Why you should never use Facebook or Google to log in to third party websites - what to do instead
@TCB13@lemmy.world avatar

What to do instead - be a normal human and create an account at the website.

capital,

After generating a unique email and password combination for said website.

Bonehead,

...then storing that information in Chrome's auto-fill because that's way too much to remember. And the circle is complete.

Masimatutu, (edited )
@Masimatutu@mander.xyz avatar

Bitwarden, everybody!

Edit: and F I R E F O X

winterayars,

This is the way.

OhmsLawn,

Password manager. Now if I could just get Google to purge all my old passwords, that would be great.

Samsy,

No problem, just use new passwords.

OhmsLawn,

I do.

em2,
@em2@lemmy.ml avatar
capital,

I use Fastmail.

BradleyUffner,

And get your login details stolen because they didn’t hah and salt passwords correctly when the site is almost immediately hacked.

wincing_nucleus073,

random password, email alias

BradleyUffner,

Pancakes, bumblebee, gazpacho soup

averyminya, in Question about phones: Am I overreacting?

How about this perspective? You are being tracked regardless. Do you have friends? Do they have your number? You have a tracking ID. Have you ever used the Internet at home not on a VPN and not on a fingerprint-preventing browser (i.e. JavaScript off)? You have a tracking ID.

This tracking ID is surrounded by data it gathers from your interactions with others, regardless of whether you want it to or not. Your lack of presence here is far more telling than actually existing. Unless you literally live off the grid no contact, there’s no getting away from it.

On the bright side, guess what? These tracking IDs are practically solely for advertising metrics. The chances of any of this data being meaningful beyond “vestmoria likes vintage cheeses after” is pretty much nil. I would even go so far as to say by having a presence in this space you are likely to be less targeted by prying eyes that actually matter, as opposed to right now where you are a clearly visible dark spot in a sea of lit beacons.

To put it another way - privacy now is through obfuscation, not lack of existence. Google solved the dumb-phone problem in 2013 and they have had advertising IDs on these from the moment they get used. They have had your data already for a long, long time now. Your advertising ID is better used clicking on every ad you come across using AdNauseam than it is trying to de-google a smartphone or avoid carrier data. Make the data on you inaccurate and worthless.

If you really want to avoid using tracking aspects of a smartphone, your best bet is convincing your people to download signal or matrix and use them exclusively, with notifications turned off on the phone. You’ll want to run a VPN you trust. Others suggested custom ROMs to get away from Google, though I’m personally no fan of MicroG either.

I think it’s worth considering accepting that unless you are very specific in how you use it, there is no real feasible way to not be tracked. Even if you take all precautions, even then, you are still being tracked by other peoples phones. With that in mind, your mental health should be put at ease knowing that rather than trying to avoid it, there are ways of feeding it dirty data to make you look like everyone else.

Using Linux you probably already are aware of quite a bit of this, but I’ve always felt that being off the grid or off the radar of adver-govs is a false hope and while there may be measures against it there’s nothing that actually prevents it in full and it’s so much more effort than allowing it to happen but lying about yourself. So what if they have data on you if it’s irrelevant! On top of that, what does it matter if your calls have data on them (date/length). The content of the calls is a different story of course, I don’t have a solution for that.

Maybe you can fake phone calls by spoofing phone models and locations and having their conversations spoken via AI.

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