Recent comments in /f/Privacy

NormalPerson OP wrote

I was trying to remember this, thanks! And about not using normal devices, it makes almost everything harder, but it's the price for having security :/ Kinda sucks, but i think it's worth it. I would like to know how to check if my username:password has been leaked, just in case, but for what I remember, never happened to me.

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Rambler wrote

Plus KeePassX has a nice extension for Firefox.

I literally did not know this. I've been ctrl+c ctrl+v'ing for years.

Hmm. I trust KeePassX more than I do things like LastPass. I may have to give that a trial run and see if it completely alters my internet life or if copy/pasting all day isn't so bad.

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hideyourlies wrote

I just like it's simplicity, the captchas can be a bit of a issue but it's never been down for me, always worked like a charm.

SIGAINT was a great mail provider on TOR but it went offline a few years back now and never resurfaced, I was thinking of actually setting my own TOR mail server up but never got round to doing it.

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Rambler wrote

KeePassX.

Though it's a pain in the ass to use sometimes when you have a different password for every thing in the world, it just feels better than using something like Lastpass which is actually super convenient but I don't trust an in-browser password manager.

Bad thing is that it more or less makes it impossible for me to log into anything if I'm not using my normal devices, which is rare, but it is what it is I guess.

I learned my lesson years ago when some website database that had my information in it was leaked and I had several accounts hacked. You think Twitter is going to help you? Try regaining access to an account when the email address associated with it has also been compromised. It's a nightmare, and in the end, I gave up.

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Rambler OP wrote

Good point. Not to mention they'll have first hand knowledge of who you're communicating with, the frequency of community, length of communication or hours of communication. They probably have GPS data knowing where you were when this communication took place.

Without even knowing what is said, you can build a somewhat thorough profile on someone based off of just that.

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Rambler wrote

I believe there was a case where they complied with law enforcement to hand over user data, and although the contents of the emails were unreadable, the header info and subject was.

I'd say it's as safe or safer than most things, though it still requires javascript to use, which that alone has some people leery of it.

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Google wrote (edited )

Tor Browser.

Now using Ungoogled-chromium, but is behind few versions.

Scared by all those security fixes? Then stop using all those chromium-based browsers.

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sudoer777 wrote

Despite recent issues with Mozilla, on my PC I use Firefox hardened with GHacks user.js and a ton of extensions because it offers the best control over the websites I browse. I've tried Vivaldi, but it doesn't have Multi Account Containers, so I only use it when websites won't work with my hardened Firefox setup and for PWAs.

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Rambler wrote

Reply to by !deleted152

Great post. I've not heard of many of these services so I may have to check them out!

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boobs wrote

let's be real, the web is all google.

the standards body: basically a front for google chrome devs

the implementation: everything built atop google chrome, firefox funded by google

where you visit: google or indirectly linked to google

the web has been lost for a while you are just realizing it. stop being in denial. we need to build something new.

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7seas wrote (edited )

Edited for simplicity, Brave doesn't use miners. Everyone wants to use crypto but when a browser integrates with crypto it's bad? Brave redirected to thier own crypto referrals when used, wich I actually support doing, they shoulda been super upfront and had a toggle on switch for it though. I want them to be paid without having to sell my data.

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