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GnomeComedy, (edited ) to privacyguides in The state of open source SMS messagers

That’s the app OP is talking about ‘selling out’ to advertisers.

GnomeComedy, to privacyguides in US lawmakers introduce surveillance reforms intended to curb FBI spying

“A decade”?! Try 2

GnomeComedy, to linux in Ubuntu 24.04 LTS Committing Fully To Netplan For Network Configuration

I think it was actually the default on 18.04 LTS as well.

GnomeComedy, to linux in Red Hat / Fedora drama?
GnomeComedy, to privacyguides in Privacy friendly Ubuntu antivirus ?

If you think ClamAV on your mom’s laptop on Starbucks WiFi is doing anything useful, but you think fail2ban isn’t - you’re naive.

On phishing - you’ve got another great example. ublock origin or any other decent adblocker will do WAAAAY more to help than ClamAV.

GnomeComedy, to privacyguides in Privacy friendly Ubuntu antivirus ?

Ideally you keep your configs in a git repo (like github). You know what’s modified because you’re the one who modified them. If you modify them - put that config file in the git repo.

As for “put down” I just meant copied to the system (from github) by your automation (like ansible)

docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/…/index.html

GnomeComedy, to privacyguides in Privacy friendly Ubuntu antivirus ?

Sounds like you’ve got a better solution, but I think you forgot to mention what it was.

GnomeComedy, to privacyguides in Privacy friendly Ubuntu antivirus ?

That, and:

  • put down config files that were modified
  • enable/start services that were installed
  • modify the firewall to open necessary ports

Basically: put everything back as it was right before the ransomware encrypted your system on you.

Then of course - fix what you did wrong that got you compromised. ;-)

GnomeComedy, (edited ) to privacyguides in Privacy friendly Ubuntu antivirus ?

No, most desktops behind a NAT probably dont need fail2ban (though it wouldn’t hurt).

Everyone’s security profile/needs are different.

The point is that list does a hell of a lot more useful than ClamAV

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