Anonimity is keeping your identity private, but not your actions.
Privacy is keeping your actions hidden, but not your identity.
Using a VPN will hide your IP and make you more anonymous online. Using a personal CC to buy the vpn does not compromise that and does not defeat the purpose at all.
Only if your specific account ID is compromised could the personal CC be used against you by identifying you. E.g.: “they” found your bad email in an inbox of somebody who is less privacy conscious and are trying to figure out who festybear69@...
is.
It depends on what your use-case/threat model is.
I think bitwarden checks all the boxes. It’s 3.33$ per month for a family plan ( 6 users). I’ve used it for a long time and I’m happy with it.
If you want more privacy you can always self host vault warden and use that. In which case you have full access to the premium features and you just pay the hosting costs.
Bitwarden can be set as the default password manager in browsers. Stores TOTP codes, has a browser plugin, has android app and iOS app.
Works flawlessly in my experience ( Linux/macbook/android).
No experience with iphones, but I assume it is fully supported.
But that’s the point. You, the 15 year old, never click or see the box. Your data is harvested because somebody somewhere else agreed to it.
It’s like giving any website the right to farm your data because somebody else on the same shared IP clicked accept all.
I’m also totally okay not having to send any identity data over the net. I fully agree there. It’s just their standpoint of “let an admin click it and we can farm everybody’s data behind that device” seems like a very unstable legal standpoint.
Then again. I’m not a lawyer and the law doesn’t work based on how lawful i feel something is or should be.
I’d rather update it as well. But the routers are behind my ISP router and aren’t externally accessible. The attack surface is smaller in that regard. I’m not happy with the thought of an unpatched router. Maybe I can hold out long enough for merlin to support my routers.
I dont think the latest few updates I did mentioned any security updates. Only bugfixes.
I’ll tackle the problem when it presents itself I guess.
Is the train of thought that if the adult approves they can harvest data from minors regardless? It harvests data from anybody using the internet, not just person handling the settings. It doesn’t seem legal that the data harvest agreement binds all users in a household rather than the one managing the settings?
Is that legal in Europe? is it legal to suddenly semi brick a device if you dont allow them to data harvest? Is it really considered giving consent freely when the device you paid $$ for suddenly no longer does 90% because you disagree with sudden data harvest practices?
I can understand a feature not working because you disagree on sharing something. E.g: can’t tell you which pizza place is near you if you dont share your location.
But this? I hope it’s illegal and they get sued into oblivion for this. This is super invasive.
To gain the most security value from ZTDNS, system admins will need to enumerate the expected domains and/or IP ranges they expect their clients to connect to,” Jake Williams wrote. “Failure to do so will result in self-inflicted denial of service.”
Glad I’m on Linux/macos at home/work. Wtf is happening.
My main issue is that if I add the bitwarden TOTP secret string manually multiple times its generating different codes between the entries. Which seems like something that shouldn’t happen.
It is a different format to the other ones I’ve got though.
Fuck Microsoft authenticator though. Had to restore it to a new phones once and if you don’t do it on initial startup you can’t restore it at all. Good thing I had a secondary app that still had them. Absolute garbage.
I know people who lived without Facebook for years who created an account just to get info from their kids’ sports clubs. A lot of them only post data about events and stuff on the Facebook page. No newsletters or anything. Just Facebook.
They don’t really have a choice. You don’t want to ask other parents all the time and they won’t send you an email specifically because you won’t create a profile.
I fully agree with your statement. But in the case above the only alternative is to either annoy other parents every week, not send your kids to scouts camp with all their friends, or just create the profile and only look at those pages.
A lot of clubs removed their website in favour of a private Facebook page. It’s unfortunate, but a reality. :(
Firefox also had a period where it was slow AF. I switched to chrome at that point which was a lot faster.
I’ve ( happily ) been on Firefox these past few years though. Firefox addons on mobile devices is a blessing too.
I enjoyed vivaldi as well before I went back to Firefox. Too bad it’s chromium based :(.
Exactly. Same as is happening with privacy right now. Chip away bit by bit. Do it all at once and people will complain. But do it bit by bit and they won’t know until it’s too late.
Similarly to the story of the frog in the boiling water. Drop it in hot water and it’ll jump out. Heat the water slowly and it’ll boil to death.
But hey. At least we’ve got nothing to hide right? /S
I think it’s related maybe to some anti terrorism law? In certain EU countries for example it’s impossible to get an anonymous SIM due to some anti terrorism legislation. SSNs are the only legal identification I guess?
This is a random guess off the top of my head. IANAL or know anything specific on US law.
I just installed it after I ran into it on some other Lemmy comment. I was hoping to replace discord with it.
It just feels like it isn’t “there” just yet? Unless I’m missing something?
If I showed it to friends of mine today and they had my experience I’m sure they’d go back to discord.
Not hating on the devs though. The product itself seems to be coming along nicely.
I was running Ubuntu at work. And a coworker was running PopOs.
Company didn’t really care what you ran. If you opted for Linux you couldn’t really rely on device support. Which is usually fine for the average Linux user.
I’ve used Linux/Mac for so long in a work environment that I only use Windows as a gaming system. And even that has improved a lot.
I used to use evolution. The main reason was that evolution was the only client I found at the time ( except bluemail I think? ) which supported the ActiveSync protocol. IMAP and the like was blocked. They had to allow it specifically in AD so it would work.
I never really took a liking to evolution personally. Can’t really say why. The outdated UI didn’t help.
I think Thunderbird might have support for it through a custom plugin which I refused to buy.
Eventually I went back to the PWA. Since i only checked my emails twice a day and it wasn’t exactly core to my job I stopped caring. The majority of the mails were management patting themselves on the back and look how great we’re doing anyway. At the end of the year you get shafted on bonus and higher targets regardless of everybody doing a “great job”.
Pardon the rant. The company left me a bit sour.
I don’t think you can a sim card anonymously in europe. You might be able to find some online, though I have no idea:
- how legal they are
- if they function at all/normally
At least in my country ( which isn’t one you listed ) you cannot buy an anonymous SIM card in shops due to some anti terrorism law ( iirc ).
I thought it was like that for the whole of Europe, but I could be wrong.
Apparently there are still EU countries where you can buy anonymous SIMs.
If it’s too hard to protect, you shouldn’t have it in the first place.