privacybro

@privacybro@lemmy.ninja

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privacybro,

All of the suggestions here are good but I would not put too much stock in where you get your DNS from if your reasons are for privacy. If anything, using anything beyond your ISP’s DNS could decrease your privacy, because now you are giving info to 2 providers (DNS and ISP)

No matter what DNS server you use, your ISP can see every single IP you connect to and doing reverse lookups is extremely trivial for them of course.

My advice is to use a good VPN provider. Any reputable one will also provide its own DNS servers as well.

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  • privacybro,

    Correct. The snakes at the top play both sides against the middle, and while everyone is distracted by the puppet show, they do whatever they choose. Classic high level deception. Divide and conquer. Sadly most privacy bros don’t understand basic psy-ops and the art of war and deception.

    privacybro,

    For alternatives, I recommend to use a community-ran Gitea instance. Project Segfault runs one.

    about.gitea.com

    git.projectsegfau.lt

    Also check out Forgejo, it’s another git software. Disroot has an instance.

    forgejo.org

    git.disroot.org

    privacybro,

    Hetzner was recently outed in allowing fed MITM attacks so I’d be careful.

    privacybro,

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

    privacybro,

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

    privacybro,

    there are people on Monero Market who will do it for you. SMS pool and Text Verified are also viable.

    Alleged RCMP leaker says he was tipped off that police targets had 'moles' in law enforcement (www.cbc.ca)

    According to Ortis, briefed him about a “storefront” that was being created to attract criminal targets to an online encryption service. A storefront, said Ortis, is a fake business or entity, either online or bricks-and-mortar, set up by police or intelligence agencies....

    privacybro,

    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…

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