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privacybro, to privacy in (Android) Sandboxed Apps with own VPN and Firewall? [solved]

if you’re willing to go advanced for a bit of extra convenience, then install a mobile browser that has proxy support and proxify that web browser then dedicate the browser to the web version of whatever service you want to use.

privacybro, to privacy in Gitlab now requires phone number/credit card verification

explain further please?

privacybro, to privacy in Can I trust filen.io?

lmao

privacybro, to privacy in Can I trust filen.io?

is this ragebait? the guy above me literally said Hetzner.

privacybro, to privacy in Anonymous phone number

you can rent numbers as well for a period of time, iirc

privacybro, to privacy in How marketing companies use "Active listening" voice data to target advertising to the EXACT people businesses are looking for

That’s kind of funny, to be honest

privacybro, to privacyguides in Alleged RCMP leaker says he was tipped off that police targets had 'moles' in law enforcement

Really appreciate your thoughts and time, thanks.

I found out also that Tutanota is essentially the same, except that they do E2EE subject lines between tutanota users, but I am guessing that is because they don’t use PGP unlike Proton. In which case, Proton is in the right in this case because they are increasing E2EE interoperability beyond just their own users. So, my comment about honeypotting was really uncalled for I think, and I apologize for that.

The OpenPGP proposal is interesting, but I couldn’t find anything on it. All I found was this below, which explains that email headers can’t be/aren’t encrypted, and subject is one of those, so that’s why. I have no clue what Proton was talking about, or where they got that info

reddit.com/…/cant_find_the_openpgp_subject_line_e…

privacybro, to privacy in How marketing companies use "Active listening" voice data to target advertising to the EXACT people businesses are looking for

yeah how do most people even tolerate it? I’d go insane.

privacybro, to privacy in Google memes itself with an admission of spying on customers via a new ad on reddit!

exactly. yet somehow they are in a privacy group. green vibes.

privacybro, (edited ) to privacy in Privacy Win: EU Parliament Decides That Your Private Messages Must Not Be Scanned!

the illusion of choice :)

privacybro, to privacyguides in Alleged RCMP leaker says he was tipped off that police targets had 'moles' in law enforcement

you’re right about the IP thing. that’s a good clarification rather than just “spy”. i suppose it’s less dire than Tutanota not encrypting incoming mails if you use tor and vpn by default.

yeah basically it more or less proves that swiss privacy is a bit stronger in this case vs Germany.

on the proton encryption, i did know about this but does that apply to proton-to-proton, proton-to-NonProton, or both? if you have details on this let me know.

either way the fact that they dont makes me feel that proton is a similar honeypot to signal and telegram, where they make a compromise with the five eyes, to give them metadata even if actual contents are safe. metadata can be much more powerful than contents often times

in general email is just the worst protocol when it comes to privacy. sadly.

privacybro, (edited ) to privacyguides in Alleged RCMP leaker says he was tipped off that police targets had 'moles' in law enforcement

False.

Proton can not be made to spy on customers most they can do is hand over info they already have

proton.me/blog/climate-activist-arrest

Proton’s encryption cannot be bypassed by legal order. Tutanota’s can.

techcrunch.com/…/german-secure-email-provider-tut…

privacybro, to privacyguides in How Google, Facebook and others use our most personal secrets against us

Well said

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