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MoshBit, in Planet fitness app with GrapheneOS

I use that app a lot and I’m considering switching to grapheneOS so I’m curious to know if you find a solution

EliasTheOG,

Well…if u want u should imo…might as well sign up thro web browser and save the qr code thro Catima…btw this is the only app Im having problem with and I have +500 apps…just enable sandbox gp and you’re good to go.

rutrum, in Planet fitness app with GrapheneOS
@rutrum@lm.paradisus.day avatar

If you need just the id you can always screenshot that barcode or store it in an app like Catima. I dont have any advice for if you need other functionality, sorry.

EliasTheOG,

This might be my only choice…I still hope that I can use the app

Genghis, in Planet fitness app with GrapheneOS

Have you tried enabling the Exploit protection compatibility mode on the PF app setting info page?

EliasTheOG,

Yes

Supermariofan67, in Privacy respecting language learning tool?

Anki is a free and open source spaced-repetition flashcard program. You can find many premade decks for it for pretty much any language, and you can create your own cards from real-world content you read (“sentence mining”). You can also find free (or pirated) grammar guides and similar content online. These two resources will give you the foundation for making your input comprehensible, but the vast majority of the learning you’ll do will come from simply reading and listening to native content while making as much of an effort to understand it as possible (such as by looking up words in the dictionary using a browser extension like yomichan)

apps.ankiweb.net

See this really good guide for learning Japanese (some of the information applies to other languages too): learnjapanese.moe

ANIMATEK, in Privacy respecting language learning tool?

Probably not what you are looking for but my wife uses a book and a private teacher that charges 30€ for 90 minutes so… look online?

smigao, in I want to self host. But I want it to be low effort. How should I go about it?

Damn check this out too.

casaos.io

man,

This OS actually come with Zimaboard

OurMoneyIsBroken, in I want to self host. But I want it to be low effort. How should I go about it?

Umbrel.com Start9.com

nutbutter, in Website domain and hosting?

Hetzner for both. For domain registration, Najalla is also good and you can pay using Monero.

db2,

Unless you’re wanting to use Plex with it.

nutbutter,

I have used Plex with it, and I am using Jellyfin, now. I have had no issues.

Xylight, in School surveillance tech does more harm than good, ACLU report finds
@Xylight@lemdro.id avatar

woah no way, spying on kids makes them feel unsafe??

🤯🤯🤯🤯

stifle867, in Simplifying warrant canaries - Purplix canary

This is a great idea! I wish more websites did warrant canaries, and those that do often fail to maintain them or plan for the case when a gag order prevents them from updating an existing canary. The only thing I would suggest is making it more clear that being in an alpha stage means that the product should not be relied upon in critical situations.

totallynotfbi,

Maybe it was updated after your comment, but the demo site has that notice prominently at the top for me

CameronDev,

A failed warrant canary is effectively a triggered warrant canary. If its triggered, you have to assume the company has been issued a warrant, and is therefore vulnerable.

stifle867,

What do you mean by a failed warrant canary? In most cases there is no clear failure because there’s no clear plan in place to maintain them.

For example, if a website has a statement “we have received 0 warrants”. When was that published? Yesterday? A year ago? More? Even if it has a date, say 6 months ago. What does that mean? That they only update it every year? Or maybe there were meant to update it they just forgot, maybe they aren’t allowed to update it due to a gag order.

Due to the way each website does things differently with no clear guidelines, there isn’t actually a defined failure case.

CameronDev,

They typically have a date for the message and the date for the next update. If they miss their update, they have failed.

stifle867,

While you can find examples of companies doing it correctly, it’s also easy to find companies who do not. Also, some update theirs seemingly daily but don’t actually state this. Sure, you can check and see that it was updated “today”, but what if it doesn’t get updated and you don’t know its “typically” updated daily. Again, no date for the next update.

These are all examples of companies who do not explicitly specify when the next update will be: kagi.com/privacy nordvpn.com/security-efforts/ cloudflare.com/transparency/

Anticorp, in Reflectacles to escape Facial Recognition

Worth the price is subjective. Are you a wanted criminal, or planning a heist? Then probably yes. Otherwise, probably no.

newIdentity,

Maybe you just want to look sick at the next rave.

Not their intended purpose, but that’s the only one that doesn’t sound stupid

Edit: looking at their website, that might be their intended target audience.

CameronDev, in Simplifying warrant canaries - Purplix canary

Someone please correct me if I am wrong, but I was under the impression that warrent canaries were a broken concept. Anyone with the power to submit a warrant to a company also has the ability to prevent the company from triggering their canary.

explore_broaden,

The idea is that there is no such action as “triggering the canary” that the government can stop them from taking. Instead they refrain from updating it, thus alerting people that something has occurred. However, since the point of a canary is that not updating it raises concerns, I’m not sure how this service makes any sense (alerts on new canaries?).

The idea is that there is a big difference between the government saying “don’t tell anyone about this” and saying “you must make a false statement (the canary) every X amount of time indefinitely.” In the past courts in the US have taken a fairly dim view of the government trying to compel speech. There are some example cases at en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compelled_speech#United_S….

Ward,
@Ward@lemmy.nz avatar

Also to note, that Purplix does warn users to assume the site has been compromised if the latest statement has expired.

explore_broaden,

That actually could be useful, by having a completely external company send a notification without action by the company receiving the warrant, it may be possible to circumvent the prohibition on alerting users.

CameronDev,

None of those compelled speech examples include national security though, which has its own level of rules and courts. (I am not American or a lawyer, so i may be wrong).

And if a company can be compelled to hand over customer data, why wouldnt they be hand over access to the systems that update the canaries?

The other issue is thar once a canary is triggered, it cant be reset, which means that XXX agency can trigger the canary with something meaningless, and then its forever untrustworthy.

You may well be correct, and they are sufficient, but i am not convinced that canaries work, especially against the higher level adversaries.

explore_broaden,

Yes, most of those points are the concerns with warrant canaries. So far as we know the concept is totally untested in court so it’s hard to say what the result would be until it happens.

Updating the canary should require a human input (like a password to unlock the GPG key), which is not sometime the government would generally get access to (they make a request for data about XYZ user, and the company turns it over; they wouldn’t get actual access to the production system). The government could seek a ruling to force the company to update the canary, but as such a thing hasn’t been granted before (at least as far as we know), it’s not a guarantee. So, there is a chance that the warrant canary will serve to alert users to something happening, which is better than nothing. But because of its untested nature, it might be broken by a court.

I’m not sure I understand your point about “once it’s triggered it can’t be reset.” If a company fails to update their canary on schedule it means something happened that they can’t disclose. Once they are released from the NDA they can release a new canary explaining what happened.

CameronDev,

Wikipedia does claim that patriot act subpeonas can penalise any disclosure of the subpeona. But i am not a lawyer, and afaik this is untested (or at least undisclosed :/ )

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warrant_canary

Some subpoenas, such as those covered under 18 U.S.C. §2709© (enacted as part of the USA Patriot Act), provide criminal penalties for disclosing the existence of the subpoena to any third party, including the service provider’s users.

In September 2014, U.S. security researcher Moxie Marlinspike wrote that “every lawyer I’ve spoken to has indicated that having a ‘canary’ you remove or choose not to update would likely have the same legal consequences as simply posting something that explicitly says you’ve received something.”

I think my point is that a gag order with a long time out essentially kills the canary, even if it doesnt affect the vast majority of the services users.

Thanks for your response though, I appreciate the additional information.

uriel238, (edited )
@uriel238@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I wonder where mandated sonograms and abortions are bad disclaimers to patients seeking abortions falls.

That speecch is mandated, yet SCOTUS barred California from mandating crisis pregancy centers reporting to patients you cannot get an abortion here but instead call these numbers to schedule one

Lots of controversies outside the topic of the thread, but certainly examples of mandated speech and rulings to prevent mandated speech.

felbane,

I think that’s the purpose of the “next update” part. As long as the ability to refresh that timestamp is gated behind a passphrase (for 5A protection) then it functions as a deadman switch for the canary.

adespoton,

Passphrases only work in locales with 5a or similar protection, and either have to be managed by a single person or have the potential to be leaked.

Great for small businesses, but unworkable at the enterprise level.

But having a canary mechanism for smaller businesses is crucial, because they can’t afford to put a wall of lawyers between them and potential government overreach.

rinkan,

The canary is triggered through inaction, not action. The government would have to compel the target of the subpoena to keep updating the canary on schedule.

not_a_bot_i_swear, in I want to self host. But I want it to be low effort. How should I go about it?
@not_a_bot_i_swear@lemmy.world avatar

This popped up directly under your question in my feed: lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/5911320

sic_semper_tyrannis, in I want to self host. But I want it to be low effort. How should I go about it?

Try OpenMediaServer on a Odroid H3+ and install the programs through Docker containers. Use a Thermal Grizzly Cryosheet instead of thermal paste under your cooler for zero maintenance

namnnumbr, in I want to self host. But I want it to be low effort. How should I go about it?

www.zimaboard.com

recent blog from hacker news

I can’t personally attest to the “easy to use self hosting OS” since I immediately installed Ubuntu (soon to be Debian) but the hardware is good and the preinstalled OS should let you get a feel for things.

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