ono

@ono@lemmy.ca

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ono, (edited )

dedent() can help with that.

ono,

So it could still be considered less secure than N.

It could be, or it could not be. Depends on the particulars, and on the needs of the individual.

Mind, I’m not going around presuming to tell other people what’s better for them, as one or two others in this thread are doing. I’m just stating what’s a good fit for me.

ono, (edited )

You’ll have to trust an additional party when getting your apps, and updates are often a couple days behind.

I know how it works, and in this case, that’s fine with me.

F-Droid has an excellent track record; better than many developers have. And I’m not addicted to having the latest versions of everything on the day they’re released. In fact, not immediately jumping on the latest versions has saved me from nasty bugs more than once.

ono,

If new versions don’t make it to F-Droid, they might as well not exist for me. There are only a couple of apps that I find important enough that I’ll spend time manually building/pulling/installing, and a Lemmy reader isn’t one of them. Thanks for the tip, though.

ono,

Part of what I value in F-Droid is the additional layer in the build/release process, because it makes tampering more likely to be detected.

It’s still nice to know a tool like obtanium exists, though. Thanks for the link.

ono,

I use it because, contrary to what that scare piece you linked would have the reader believe, it’s better for my needs than the alternatives.

(I’m no stranger to software development and security, by the way. I understand the pros and cons.)

ono,

I start with whatever is on F-Droid, and narrow it down from there.

Jerboa was the only option there until recently. I see Voyager and Eternity are there now. I’ll have to give them a try.

ono, (edited )

It’s not just Protonmail.

Blacklists like these aggressively and unapologetically collect all privacy-focused email domains they find, including simple forwarding and tagging services. With more and more sites using these lists to reject or black-hole email addresses, it has become difficult to protect one’s self from spam and cross-site account tracking.

Dear web developers, please don’t use these lists. Well-intended or not, they are privacy and user-hostile.

ono,

Devs can use them to block DISPOSABLE mails, not PRIVACY legitimate emails.

That’s what they claim, but in practice, they seldom distinguish between the two.

ono,

That’s not what this specific list is for.

Yet it has a lot of legitimate domains, and has had them for years.

Regardless of whether the maintainer is malicious or just irresponsible, his list is doing harm.

ono, (edited )

You’re getting into very sketchy territory by saying a dev who is using a public GitHub repo to solve their problems needs to take it down

No, I don’t believe I said any such thing. Since you mention it, though, I think taking this list down and removing the false positives before bringing it back up would be the responsible thing to do.

In the interest of specifics, can you point to where this specific list has done harm?

I know from personal experience and investigation (both as a user and on the admin side) that there are now many cases of privacy-focused email addresses being rejected, or even worse, accepted and then silently black-holed, due to the domains being inappropriately added to lists like this one. I don’t know of a place where people report such cases so they can be documented in aggregate, but if I find one, I’ll be sure to bookmark it in case your question comes up again in the future.

ono, (edited )

please let the kids all of us be free of corporate abuse and greed.

ono, (edited )

The contents of the chat messages are e2e encrypted, so meta can’t see what you are sending.

Even if we assume correct e2ee is used (which we have no way of knowing), Meta can still see what you are sending and receiving, because they control the endpoints. It’s their app, after all.

ono, (edited )

Americans tend to be pushy and, well, stupid in foreign lands.

Unpleasant people stand out, so they’re the ones we notice. They make an impression, so they’re the ones we remember. This is true of tourists from all over the world, from America to China.

I wouldn’t be surprised if it turned out that most are respectful, but end up either unnoticed or forgotten.

ono,

I’m glad there are two useful server implementations already. I hope to see more in the future.

kurgal, to RedditMigration

Can anyone explain to me what a Microblog is and how is it different from a thread? Are they similar to what a Toot is on Mastodon?

ono,

Microblogging is tweeting, or tooting, or similar. Very short messages, usually from one person and directed to whomever happens to notice them.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microblogging

A thread is a collection of comments from people replying to one another, usually organized in a tree structure. It’s more like a conversation.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conversation_threading

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