MigratingtoLemmy

@MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.world

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Me vs my ISP

So I was looking into getting port forwarding set up and I realized just how closed-off the internet has gotten since the early days. It’s concerning. It used to be you would buy your own router and connect it to the internet, and that router would control port-forwarding and what-have-you....

MigratingtoLemmy,

Yup. I’ll open a port in a cheap VPS and tunnel my traffic over that rather than directly open ports on my router. If people here can trust Cloudflare they can use their tunnels too

MigratingtoLemmy,

Whatever works. I prefer OpenVPN/Softether for their SSL VPN implementations, and am too lazy to be arsed to deal with stunnel and Wireguard. But if you’re not as paranoid then Wireguard works perfectly fine

MigratingtoLemmy,

Unfortunately, Firefox is the best option right now, and it works rather well, unlike about 5-6 years back when it was horrible.

I’ll use Librewolf and Ungoogled-Chromium

MigratingtoLemmy,

Yes

MigratingtoLemmy,

Include IoT and maybe electrical engineering in that if you’re hard-core into cheap little devices/sensors from Aliexpress/Taobao

MigratingtoLemmy, (edited )
  1. Use DoT
  2. Use Librewolf
  3. TOR has been compromised, use it sparingly.

Understand the fight. We have three major pipelines for leakage of inferences/data on the internet:

  1. IP
  2. Metadata
  3. Content we produce
MigratingtoLemmy,

The NSA has always had multiple 0-days for TOR, but that’s beside the point. The current rumour is that the NSA controls more than half of the traffic on the TOR network, courtesy of them owning a massive number of high-performance nodes.

I’m going to read more on how i2p works, but if I see more NSA involvement I’m bucking out of that too

How many of you run a Linux phone (Pine64, Librem etc) as your daily driver?

I was going through Pine64’s page again after I found the latest KDE announcement. With that said, I seem to see a lot of issues with firmware on the Pine, whilst the Librem is just plain out of budget for me. Was interested in how many people here run a Linux mobile as a daily driver, and how has your experience been?...

MigratingtoLemmy,

I’m waiting for devices to get the 5.10 kernel or the ones after it, so I can run supported KernelSU builds and take my life into my own hands.

MigratingtoLemmy,

I tend to use my credit card for most of my purchases, online or in-person. In doing so, I haven’t come across the problem of payments you describe, although I’m unaware if the apps I use utilise Google’s API in the back-end to do this (for example, does the Amazon app use some Android API to process my payment using a credit card?).

I think I’d be fine without most Google apps except for Maps, where OpenStreetMap has not served me well so fat (unfortunate, since I would like to use it but it is not as reliable in my experience). I can do my banking in the browser, and consume my video content (YouTube/Peertube/LBRY) in the browser anyway.

I’m going to revisit the Murena mobiles again, and I’ll reiterate how disappointed I am that the FP5 is not available in the US. At this point, I’ll pin my hopes on KernelSU for the next few years (hoping I don’t have to compile my own kernel, I’d like to get a cheap device running the 5.10 kernel or those after it), but consumer devices don’t have hardware killswitches or privacy features or replaceable parts either (and iFixit doesn’t cover every device).

This was a long comment, and I appreciate this discourse with you. Thanks again.

MigratingtoLemmy,

And the commenter is lamenting how greedy companies are getting and customers agreeing to get themselves bent for these corporations. Apple started the pricing model and Samsung followed suit, and now everyone just takes it as default pricing. This is a pathetic state of affairs

MigratingtoLemmy,

iOS being secure is a farce which the population has just gobbled up without reason

MigratingtoLemmy,

Which recent devices other than the Pixels are supported?

MigratingtoLemmy,

Lucky

MigratingtoLemmy,

Yeah

MigratingtoLemmy, (edited )

Which ones in that range, released in 2023 have custom ROM support?

MigratingtoLemmy,

I’m holding out hope for KernelSU, in which case I won’t need to care about custom ROMs and things like safetyNET either. A root from kernel-space + a custom launcher and I won’t miss OEM android at all. The only thing I haven’t figured out is patch management, but I’ll leave that to people more intelligent than me

MigratingtoLemmy,

I like Graphene, I don’t like how expensive the Pixels are

MigratingtoLemmy,

You get more options

MigratingtoLemmy,

Just so happens to be the only one in the USA

MigratingtoLemmy,

Yes

MigratingtoLemmy,

How do you do instant messaging? Isn’t typing with that harder than average?

MigratingtoLemmy,

Essentially, your usage of your mobile ends with calling?

Unfortunately, that won’t work for me since I need a browser to check my accounts and other needs on the move

MigratingtoLemmy,

I completely agree with your statement (that’s how my day goes too), but I wanted a mobile device. Thanks

MigratingtoLemmy,

I’m interested in the problems you faced. I have realised that I will need GMS/MicroG for maps, and am unclear if I can get a FOSS app to host my local mail inbox without GMS. Other than that, everything else can be done in the browser (technically even maps can be used in the browser but I digress).

Would like to know which services prevent you from leaving Google

MigratingtoLemmy,

I think you replied to the wrong comment haha

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