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Lemongrab

@Lemongrab@lemmy.one

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Lemongrab,
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QUIK is a fork of QKSMS but updated. Partison SMS is another fork

Lemongrab,
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waves hands External spare wheel, spare pubes. All connected.

Help me choose my mobile browser

As per title, Help me choose a browser for android I have non rooted device. After all the researches I found best for me would be 1: Mull but with Some way for knowing which site have saved any data on my device (Maybe by extension or some defined page like about:config type) But as per my research I do not found any such...

Lemongrab, (edited )
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Mull works the same as Fennec, except it is hardended with patches from Tor and Arkenfox user.js. No real reason IMO to use fennec over Mull, whose developers also contribute to Fennec. Ghostery also changes your fingerprint, acting as one more data point. Mull has a whole bunch of configured flags to reduce fingerprinting, and many more to help with security (like disabling JIT).

Check here for some comparisons:

divestos.org/pages/browsers

privacytests.org

Lemongrab,
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Firefox resistant fingerprinting does the first 2 things, the last one is mobile partial letterboxing. All are anti fingerprinting techniques, but i understand how they may be restrictive. Maybe just add dark reader to have dark mode forced on websites, which technically can be fingerprinted but has a large userbase so idk.

Lemongrab,
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Because Mull is hardened Firefox without telemetry. Brave is Chromium based and the company is shady.

Lemongrab, (edited )
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Magic Earth is proprietary FYI. Good privacy policy and good service, only real problem I have is its not FOSS.

Lemongrab,
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I find it reliable. I just use subscriptions feed.

Lemongrab,
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I agree, and here is a good resource explaining:

divestos.org/pages/browsers

Lemongrab,
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Yes for all those things. Doesnt have youtube recommended or sign in, but you can export youtube subscriptions from your account. LibreTube is also great and i like it better (when my phone doesnt cause problems)

Lemongrab,
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Its a webview browser which is just a chrome system widget.

Lemongrab,
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Might as well use a FOSS app like NewPipe x Sponsorblock.

Fdroid repo: apt.izzysoft.de/…/org.polymorphicshade.newpipe

Lemongrab,
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Add cromite (the main bromite fork) which is on Windows and Android, and Mull by DivestOS (like arkenfox for Android). If you want to make a mobile section I would recommend Mull, Cromite, Fenix (fdroid). The thing with privacy browsers is they differ from security centric browsers. Vandium and Mulch are chromium security browsers for Graphene and Divest respectively, Cromite is a privacy chromium browser with good security as well. Ungoogled is designed as a drop in replacement for vanilla Chromium, and has custom flags for hardenning that must be enabled manually.

Lemongrab,
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Iirc Manifest v3 effect extensions. Chromium mobile doesnt support extensions in the first place (except kiwi which isnt great for privacy). Cromite uses imported blocklists in the settings and therefore should be alright.

Next smartphone I buy, which one do you recommend?

Things that make me angry about my current smartphone Samsung Galaxy S21Ultra on a Verizon plan is the mandatory software updates in which they install WITHOUT MY PERMISSION stupid apps like Netflix and addictive gambling games and stacking block games and Candy crush. God knows what else they install without my permission. I...

Lemongrab,
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Desktop linux isn’t the same as Android, which is why I said the “Android security model”. Android is a mobile operating system and must protect against the fact that it will be in unknown environments all the time. It must protect against physical attacks, software attacks, and partially sandbox apps. Root breaks app sandboxing and allows for modifying system files and reading internal app storage. The system image is immutable and modifications/settings are made on top.

Linux desktop isn’t more secure out of the box. The general user account shouldnt be a sudoer. Immutable OSes are more secure and help pervent rootkits and other attacks. PCs are most often stationary and stored in a private location. Laptops are weak against attacks because you can boot to a different OS from usb without passworded BIOS. Desktop OSes are the geared for the same kinds of protections.

There is good reason why Android is far more secure than Linux mobile.

Lemongrab,
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Rooting defeats androids security model and allows for further exploitation. Graphene most likely does support it because any AOSP OS that is geared towards security isn’t going to leave a big hole in their security allowing malware or bad actors to modify system files (or install a rootkit).

How private am I?

I think we all draw a line between privacy and convenience and I think I found mine and settled into a comfort zone of sorts. I use Fedora 38. My browser is Mozilla Firefox with it’s “strict” setting. uBlock origin and uMatrix. When I need/want to use a site that doesn’t work due to blocked connections I relax the...

Lemongrab,
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Willing to expand on that? They are well audited, and changing your ip helps to disassociate from your approx location (also allows for multiple browsers to come from a common ip).

Also of course a vpn isnt going to make you invisible. Fingerprinting can allow you to uniquely identify browsers through using a handful of metrics.

Lemongrab,
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Easy, but I wouldnt suggest you make things too inconvenient (I personally am fine with unbreaking things).

Some thoughts/suggestions:

  • uMatrix is dead fyi.
  • Librewolf is arkenfox but with less fiddling if you want to give it a try.
  • Set your browser to us a DNS over HTTPS (like mullvad).
  • You can use NewPipe as a youtube app alternative, FreeTube on desktop, and Invidious or Piped in browser.
  • ProtonVPN is free and trusted.

DoH blocker for IOS: Mullvad or Aha DNS Blitz

So I prefer to use a DNS blocker (DoH) on my IOS devices to block ads, malware, and trackers. For the longest time I’ve been using Aha DNS Blitz because it allows you to choose the exact filter lists you want to enable. Recently I saw Mullvad now has their own DoH service as well and I’m trying it out now. It’s not as...

Lemongrab, (edited )
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Mullvad hands down. No log policy. For ad blocking, you can use their various domains for different levels of blocking.

An in-browser content blocker is better at blocking than domain-based blocking techniques, but both are good.

Lemongrab,
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+1 for this app. Functions like stock clock with the needed permissions.

Lemongrab,
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Shouldnt be able to brick because it uses ADB debugging. Protected system files still can’t be altered, therefore factory reset would fix and problem with system instability.

Lemongrab,
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Not even to make them happy, its a survival technique.

Lemongrab,
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While i agree in the idea of destigmatizing sex, consent (or lack there of) is a key part in why this is so traumatic, without even considering the negative and wrongfully directed anger often targeted at the victim by their community.

Lemongrab,
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I can ruin your reputation or be used in conjuction with other social engineering techniques to eicit fear. It is also very intimate and personal, and shows a private side of your person that may not be intended for others. Examples of threats could be sending them to in-laws, emoyeers, your whole office, the school were your kids attend. Even without any really intention of distributing it, the threat is enough.

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