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birdcat, in Which country treats privacy at worst ?
@birdcat@lemmy.ml avatar

Idk. But I know a country where the VPN quadrupled my internet speed.

alldreadme, in Which country treats privacy at worst ?
@alldreadme@lemmy.world avatar

I was gonna say India but then I read the rest of the post lol

MagneticFusion, in Which country treats privacy at worst ?

Surprised more people are not saying China

colourlessidea, in Which country treats privacy at worst ?

Singapore is pretty bad as well

ratzki, in DNS-based tracker blocking vs local app-based tracker blocking,

DNS-based blocking more complete for your whole network, independent of the device settings for tech-avers users/kids. DNS-based blocking is less flexible for all users in the network - especially when you need to make exceptions for certain sites. They are also limited to your home network, unless you have a VPN server. Therefore, for mobile devices app-based blocking is the main way to go. Consequently, both make sense and your use case is relevant.

narwhal,

There are services like nextdns.io that makes it super easy to use DNS-based tracker blocking on most devices.

shgr,
@shgr@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

Mullvad also has DNS with different kind of blockers: mullvad.net/…/dns-over-https-and-dns-over-tls/And for the DNS blocking you don’t need an account.

Papanca, in Should I worry about "legitimate interest" tracking cookies?

I asked about it too, read the answers here:

phtn.app/post/lemmy.world/5698358

Albin9326, in Should I worry about "legitimate interest" tracking cookies?
@Albin9326@kerala.party avatar

Cookies are less harmful when comparing to other tracking like canvas fingerprint or thirdparty scripts tracking.

JelloBrains, in Your Cheap Android TV Streaming Box May Have a Dangerous Backdoor
@JelloBrains@kbin.social avatar

Is Wired out here taking stories from YouTubers? I swear Linus Tech Tips covered this entire thing months ago, saying basically to stick to Fire, Onn or Chromecast devices.

iAmTheTot,
@iAmTheTot@kbin.social avatar

Uh, do you think Linus broke that story?

Multiple people can report on the same thing.

venoft,
@venoft@lemmy.world avatar

They already warned for that like 5 years ago when I was looking for a cheap box.

Melatonin, in Your Cheap Android TV Streaming Box May Have a Dangerous Backdoor

Anti-Paywall bot?

throws_lemy,
@throws_lemy@lemmy.nz avatar

Wait, you got paywalled? Try clearing browser cache and cookies first and use private browsing.

MonkderZweite,

Step 1: block third-party scripts

Step 2: profit

Devjavu, in Should I worry about "legitimate interest" tracking cookies?

Well, I still disable them. The theory behind them is, that they actually serve a purpose for the function of the site, whereas cookies in general can be used for a variety of actions. Like tracking. Realistically, the site will work just fine without.

narc0tic_bird, in DNS-based tracker blocking vs local app-based tracker blocking,

If I had to pick only one of the two, I’d prefer local blocking because it cannot only not load ads, but also remove the placeholder/frame the ad would’ve been in. It’s also better at circumventing anti-adblock scripts.

That being said, DNS-based blocking is great outside of browser use, and it blocks many ads and tracking attempts in mobile and desktop apps.

A combination of both is best, really. I use uBlock Origin in the browser (or AdGuard Pro with Safari on Mac and iPhone) and then NextDNS. NextDNS is configured rather conservative though, because it can cause things to break otherwise, and that’s hard to manage when you’re not the only use of your network.

stifle867,

Another benefit of using uBlock Origin is the ability to use the cosmetic filters so you can remove elements from the page that aren’t served as ads in the typical sense. As an example when you’re reading an article and there’s an obnoxious box half way through that says CONSIDER SUBSCRIBING etc. It’s not loading any external resources, it’s just inlined HTML. But you can enter element picker mode and if you are able to uniquely target that element you can filter it out.

Llamajockey, in Your Cheap Android TV Streaming Box May Have a Dangerous Backdoor

A Chromecast is 30$

DAMunzy, in Your Cheap Android TV Streaming Box May Have a Dangerous Backdoor

Reddit thread from 9 months ago talking about this: turewell.com/…/android-tv-box-10-t95-quad-core-64…

Good article about it: malwarebytes.com/…/preinstalled-malware-infested-…

SaltySalamander, in Your Cheap Android TV Streaming Box May Have a Dangerous Backdoor
@SaltySalamander@kbin.social avatar

Almost certainly has a dangerous backdoor, you mean.

ultratiem, in Your Cheap Android TV Streaming Box May Have a Dangerous Backdoor
@ultratiem@lemmy.ca avatar

“May”. Lmaooo

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