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brayd, in Logseq: A privacy-first, open-source platform for knowledge management.

Using it and I love it! Can definitely recommend it!

spatialdestiny, in Should the ChrisTitus Ultimate Windows Utility be officially recommended on Privacy Guides?

If anyone is interested, there’s a windows tool called AtlasOS, atlasos.net, that is a significant debloat tool. It’s designed for gamers to get as much fps and performance out of their system as possible. Yes I’ve had things break, and yes it’s a security issue, but I’ve never had a problem with the games I play. I like the idea and enjoy trying it out when Linux isn’t an option for something I’m trying to do.

hburb3ri, in Good VPS providers providing anonymity

They are called bulletproof hosting and are illegal. They get shut down pretty quick for obvious reasons. You won’t find any reputable ones for a reason, because they don’t want to be hosting illegal content like CP. They also get their IPs blacklisted and automatically marked as spam/suspicious/phishing. It’s just a bad idea.

You can have private hosting and not anonymous hosting, they are not the same. Just try to go for one in the EU for the most privacy friendly laws.

nightdice, in Which port to run Wireguard on

Generally speaking, you never want to use a low port (<1024) for anything other than the service assigned to it, because it causes all kinds of headache. Both on your side and on the other side. As for high ports, pick whichever one you prefer. They don’t have any binding to a given service, though there are some conventions.

The thing that shows people you’re running a VPN is not the port but the protocol header, so changing the port is pretty much useless if you want your ISP to not know you’re running a VPN for some reason.

freeman,

Tbh I moved my VPS vpn to port 443 because some public networks (ie; public wifi) will block the default ports (ie 1194 for openvpn).

cjerrington, in Which port to run Wireguard on
@cjerrington@kbin.social avatar

Changing ports isn’t a terrible thing, also not the perfect “fix” either, as you can still recognize open ports and scan the service on them.

Some ports are reserved in networking, so should stay away from those.

Some ISPs don’t allow you open ports on 80/443 as those are web hosting ports and they provide a service to consumers to download content from the internet, not for their consumer to be a web hosting provider as well. That’s at the residential level, if you have a business plan that might change, but it might be hard to convince and ISP otherwise.

hellfire103, in YouTube tests disabling videos for people using ad blockers
@hellfire103@sopuli.xyz avatar

What absolute wankers! In case anyone’s adblock goes south, here are some YouTube alternatives:

For Watching YouTube

For Uploading

  • PeerTube
  • Idk, make a video blog or something.
archomrade, in YouTube tests disabling videos for people using ad blockers

The one thing the Reddit exodus has taught me, is that I’m almost eager for a reason to ditch my social media and either find something new or simply take back that time and do something more fulfilling anyway.

I’m so much happier not being constantly blasted with advertisements, that now when I have to go back on insta or FB for whatever reason, I can’t stand more than 30 seconds before I nope back off.

Looking forward to axing YouTube from my life next.

SpookyBogMonster, in YouTube tests disabling videos for people using ad blockers
@SpookyBogMonster@lemmy.ml avatar
dngray, in YSK: Garuda Lunux default browser (FireDragon) contains problematic extensions
@dngray@lemmy.one avatar

Just a reminder, we specifically recommend against Garuda due to their unsafe usage of Chaotic-AUR.

daredevil, in Introducing the Proton Drive Windows app
@daredevil@kbin.social avatar

Even though this is a nice development, I'm pretty disappointed in the resources directed at Linux support. I'm considering dropping Proton soon.

db2, in Is Nautilus data privacy friendly ?

What do you mean by ‘data privacy friendly’? It’s a file manager.

Slotos, in Has anyone used Kagi Search (search engine)?

I’m weirded out by their “why need an account” explanation when Mullvad has a perfectly viable solution that doesn’t require one. “We don’t link your queries to you” is a vastly different claim from a “we can’t link your queries to you” one. Still, considering who we compare them to…

On a personal note, Google search is so infuriatingly shitty lately that I’d been thinking about switching to another service. This does look to be worth a try.

DataDreadnought,
@DataDreadnought@lemmy.one avatar

Well Mullvad can only offer that because they require you to be on their VPN. How would Kagi enforce their payment plan without an account?

Slotos,

Mullvad can offer that because they generate you a one time access token that’s good until a certain time for a set number of simultaneous clients.

Kagi could do a simpler version - an access token that’s good until a certain number of searches. In fact, they have that mostly built - the link they tell you to use in private sessions is literally it.

Add to that anonymized payment options, and you got yourself a hard to track design.

db2, in Why does Play Store prompt me to update Bitwarden?

It has the same signature.

ZenArtist, in How safe is Bitwarden?
@ZenArtist@kbin.social avatar

I'll play the devil's advocate here.

Since bitwarden is a VC funded company, I'm wary of the enshittification that might take place in the future. Even though technically speaking, you can self-host the server via Vaultwarden, it is largely possible because the project has blessing of official devs. That can change dramatically in future.

For something as important as your passwords, trusting a for-profit company might not be the best idea.

Would love to know what the community thinks about this.

DISCLAIMER: I love Bitwarden and use it daily, both for personal use and at work.

Logster998,

The VC money has gone to good though, like audits and open source code. A lot of the money they get is from company deals with bitwarden buisness anyway. As long as that works out, I can’t see them screwing over anyone while they have a money stream. If they do screw up, exporting to KeyPassXC is super easy anyway.

gogosempai, in What 2FA app are you switching to? (iOS)
@gogosempai@programming.dev avatar

I have been using ProtonMail and Drive already so it was an easy decision to switch to Proton Pass when it came out. It’s an all-in-one password manager which let’s you store 2FA as well and also let’s you make email aliases. It’s synced everywhere, on Firefox on my linux desktop to my android phone to my iPad.

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