Ah, of course, the privacy oriented company becomes suspicious when it moves OUT of Russia, i see!
Ah, of course, the privacy oriented company becomes suspicious when it moves OUT of Russia, i see!
Add ProtonVPN‘s NetShield to the list. Also blocks trackers.
„ppl i don’t agree with have the same stance on privacy for basically the same reasons as I do and because the media is trained like pawlow‘s dogs they will now frame the exact opposite as sane and now I’m mad at the ppl I don’t agree with“ - the post.
Someone mentioned it on /g/ a year ago and I never looked back. Great App!
i can really recommend https://freetubeapp.io for desktop.
it’s worth mentioning that protonpass unlocks biometrical on mobile devices and the browser-plugins support 6-digit pin codes.
i hereby baptize you by the 31337 hacker name “zer0 coOl”.
you’re welcome! i had a similar thought when i looked up the pw of a service i haven’t used in some time and scrolled throug the iphone app and then it clicked, that most ipad apps work pretty fine on M1/2 macs and theres that.
i never used bitwarden or any other password manager before (not counting icloud/firefox) but protonpass also lets me add notes (stand alone notes) and credit card informations.
my wife has the free plan since she also don’t email often and she never deleted a single mail in two years and still didn’t ran out of space, so i guess you should be fine ;)
but consider subscribing to help it staying alive! (no, i don’t work for them)
well, i’m not endorsing it but if your take on (online) privacy is pursuing a career in that field, i won’t talk you out if it :>
the internet and it’s tools shouldn’t be the centerpoint of our private lives. use it when you want/have to or just feel like it, but don’t let it dictate your personal habits and relationships. if you want to fuck over big tech and the all-seeing eye of the glowies, just stop feeding them instead just trying to avoid them.
unironically and without bad intentions saying this: touch grass. what good does maximum privacy when you don’t do anything with it? one major take away for me from caring about privacy was the realization, that i tended to be “terminally online” (given my job needs me to sit in front of a computer during most working hours) and started to live more in the “analogue world”. enjoy reading books again. take your family more out, explore your city, the countryside - and turn your phone off. just pretend it’s 1998 again. good luck & see you out there, space cowboy!
proton-to-proton-mails are end-to-end-encrypted and so are password protected mails sent outside proton servers. i once had to reset the password of my kids protonmail and all the mails - including the subject - had become unreadable.
i don’t care anymore if musk is pro or anti free speech, he’s a grifter who transforms twitter into a dystopian, western version of wechat and i don’t trust him. simple as.
“One thing to note is they also encrypt the e-mail subject, whereas (for example) Proton Mail does not.” - protonmail does encrypt their mails if you send it to another protonmail address, and skiff is doing the exact same thing.
Well, at least that changed. A friend is currently testing kagi‘s search engine, i still think $5/month for 300 searches is a grift, but yeah …
call me paranoid, but i somehow don’t trust a webbrowser thats basically developed and maintained by a single person who needs you to join his discord to download it (at least that was the case in 2021).
@grafcube it’s very important to push back against google’s browser hegenomy just like we did back in the day with microsoft because now it’s not just about one company controllin the software to access the majority of the web but the privacy of it.
Source: skizo rambling on /g/