

I trust code more than politics.
My questions regarding many things...
1mon 18d ago in privacy@lemmy.mlThat did not used to be true here.
I've been researching the history of privacy. It seems World War I was the beginning of the adoption of identity documents (e.g. passports). Every time a major war happened, it got worse and worse.
How do you handle apps that refuse to run on rooted/jailbroken phones or on devices without Google Play Services? Can microG, Xposed, or other tools help in practice? (F*ck Play Integrity and “Google Play license check”). Can I bypass those restrictions without rooting?
The best thing you can do is leave feedback so that the developers fix it themselves. Rooting is not advised for security reasons.
Have you ever rooted your phone? Any practical advice for someone considering it? I don’t have a phone I know is compatible with alternative ROMs (e.g., LineageOS), so I’m leaning toward rooting and would appreciate recommendations or warnings.
No. I was fortunate enough to be able to flash GrapheneOS on a Google Pixel. You should know that you can debloat stock using something like Universal Android Debloater Next Generation. That provides more privacy without compromise to much of the security. Rooting gives you full control but is a major security regression because you have full control.
How often do you need to show ID where you live (hospitals, government offices, large transactions, etc.)? For example, in my country I always have to show ID (or use face ID) at places like hospitals or when making large transactions.
I've opted out of most institutions in the United States, but the most frequent times I show my ID are for employment, cashing paychecks, and any government-related things (e.g. obtaining a driver's license, opening a post office box, etc.)
How is eID implemented in your country? Does your government require or strongly encourage using eID apps? Are they widely adopted? (I know the EU’s planned age‑verification app is a form of eID—or not really. Real examples are Germany’s AusweisApp and Vietnam’s VNeID. Anyway, that age‑verification law should not exist).
eID hasn't been widely adopted here, at least not yet.
First person to comment gets a product key to Norton 360 Deluxe - 25GB 1 User 3 Devices 12 Month
2mon 28d ago in piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.comI don't really want it
Made a Riddle app that only shows answer when you are right
3mon 2d ago in opensource@lemmy.ml from purpleweb.codeberg.pageAnd here are all the answers. You might try authenticating answers server-side or replacing them with hashes ;)
It's not a huge deal since you linked to the source of the riddles, but it can be a fun blue team project.
ProtonMail provides information used to identify email owner...
3mon 14d ago in privacy@lemmy.ml from www.404media.coOP's title certainly doesn't help.
Proton was legally ordered by the Swiss justice department to hand over the (severely limited) information about a law breaking organization's account. They had paid for Proton using a credit card instead of the anonymous payment methods Proton offers, and that is what Proton was forced to hand over. It was the organization's bad OpSec, not Proton willingly deanonymizing users.
"Why is your phone in airplane mode?"
4mon 22d ago in privacy@lemmy.mlI think it’s reasonable to have a load-up-minutes dumb phone
Those are becoming harder and harder to find. It's hard to even find prepaid SIM cards. You now have to buy a voucher, create an account, and add it there, which activates the phone for the number of months the voucher is worth.
Uses Archlinux?
secureblue :)
even though they don’t even know what a folder is
Someone once tried sharing a file with me by copy pasting the file path as if it were a URL
Switching audio channels crashes GNOME
4mon 23d ago in linux@lemmy.mlThis was helpful, thank you.
Are botted votes possible?
4mon 29d ago in lemmy_support@lemmy.mlGift Ideas for Privacy People
6mon 19d ago in privacy@lemmy.ml from lemmy.mlApproximately 1 in 25 Pixel users run GrapheneOS
6mon 27d ago in privacy@lemmy.mlA Very Dystopian Screenshot
7mon 10d ago in privacy@lemmy.ml from lemmy.mlA Free Society Relies on Privacy
7mon 15d ago in privacy@lemmy.mlA list of privacy tips
7mon 25d ago in privacy@lemmy.mlThe "Nothing to hide" argument is (still) a logical fallacy
7mon 28d ago in privacy@lemmy.mlVPN Comparison 2.0
8mon 10d ago in privacy@lemmy.ml from lemmy.ml


