

Why do you need adobe when ai can make catgirl pictures automatically?
Why do you need adobe when ai can make catgirl pictures automatically?
That’s true once it’s received, but it’s still processed by proton and now we know they are pro-nazi so who knows what they would do.
You can avoid this with pgp as stated (default for proton to proton messages), but I don’t think it’s worth considering the at rest encryption at proton anymore.
Protonmail uses pgp under the hood. Their encryption was only ever within proton accounts because they had an automatic key lookup system. You can of course add your own keys, but most didn’t. Still pgp.
I don’t have the 512 gb of ram needed to open more than two browsers at the same time, high roller.
Signal: over a decade of leaking nothing and providing a great service for free, with some weird hiccups along the way like cryptocurrency.
Privacy “advocates”: fuck signal
You used it with keepassxc?
Truly the year of the Linux desktop
My earliest knowledge was 2011, can confirm
No, this was obvious a decade or more ago and it’s still obvious today. I believe it followed the rule that “if there is something only male libertarians like, it’s not good”.
The story of Bitcoin is the same story as PayPal and Peter thiel and the first X, except the man-children are less famous.
Lol “supposed to”
Tell me another joke
Did you even read what you linked?
You can, depending on which precise bar is meant.
I mean it’s source available, but sure I guess
I was on your side until this message.
Zen seems to have picked up a lot of privacy improvements but it’s a pretty small team doing a lot of ambitious work. I like it, but it’s got a lot of (minor, mostly aesthetic) bugs.
I use mullvad for stuff I really don’t want a record of (for as much as that’s possible)
On the chrome side, Vivaldi (former opera before they sold out to china) is a good browser, but even more ambitious and even more buggy than zen. It has a built in email client. Like, who does that?
Correct you need about 32 gb of ram to use two web browsers at the same time.