- 3 Posts
- 41 Comments
You are acting like you can’t read the scripts yourself LOL.
Shouldn’t the podcast about passwords and 2FA be called “Security 101” instead of “Privacy 101”? How is that related to privacy? You should have two sections for your episodes: one for privacy and one for security.
lock@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•The Tea App leak is an example why you should not always give your face and ID willy-nilly93·8 days agoIf you submit your ID to a random app with no history and unknown developers and company, don’t be surprised if it gets leaked. This app is garbage and should be removed immediately. The company most likely used AI.
Tbf, PornHub’s ID verification is better than this. You can trust PornHub more than this random app with your ID, and there’s a reason why. This app just collected your ID for no reason. No wonder they only allow US users!
lock@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•The Tea App leak is an example why you should not always give your face and ID willy-nilly2·8 days agoIt would be hilarious if they allowed European users.
If you want the most privacy focused ISP, check out Cape. You can view the post I made about this company.
lock@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Infinite "prove you are a human" loops on archive.is with Firefox + VPN?1·12 days agoI was using Tor.
lock@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Infinite "prove you are a human" loops on archive.is with Firefox + VPN?1·13 days agoI am not getting prompted any captcha when I visit the site.
lock@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Six arrested at protest of Palantir, tech company building deportation software for Trump admin11·13 days agoI don’t understand why people are protesting. If you entered the country illegally, why are you surprised that they’re kicking you out? In some countries, the punishment is far worse, but in the U.S., they just deport you and send you back to your home country. To me, that seems like a good deal. Many immigrants did it the right way, so it’s not fair for those who didn’t to get away with illegally entering the country. Palantir is a terrible company, though.
I don’t know why you were downvoted. It looks stupid.
lock@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Feds in Catalonia, Spain think everyone using a Google Pixel must be a drug dealer110·19 days agoNot people you know, a random civilian. Highly doubt that you have walked past a random civilian who uses GrapheneOS. It just makes you stand out way more and is extremely rare to find a random person using GrapheneOS
Sadly privacy is costly. It’s the only option compared to the others
You can go on the site without javascript, but it breaks the UI
Major difference, as this is a carrier.
They have a special option called Obscura but it is only available via contact
One of Cape Obscura’s key features is identifier rotation. By regularly changing the identifiers your phone transmits—like IMSI, IMEI, and AdID—Cape makes it nearly impossible for trackers or malicious actors to follow your digital footprint. Source
lock@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Feds in Catalonia, Spain think everyone using a Google Pixel must be a drug dealer17·19 days agoHow many people have you seen use GrapheneOS in public?
It would be the first ever telecom honeypot. Even if it was a honeypot, nothing sufficient can be collected and it would not make sense to waste so much resources on an entire telecom company for no info. Just does not make sense
Don’t be paranoid whenever you stumble upon a privacy company because If everybody doesn’t trust a decent privacy focused company like you, the company will fall. You can’t just assume something is a honeypot because of small details.
Signal is also US-based and Cape is literally a carrier with coverage only in America. I found one of there employees that previously worked 9 years with DuckDuckGo and is now working with Cape.
The coverage is only in America, I guess it doesn’t need to be collected over there
They use Digital Signatures instead of usernames and passwords. Cape employees don’t port out numbers and only you can with a 24 word seedphrase you can read more about it here so I guess they are more secure compared to others.
This has to be a joke, what do you mean “just use signal” and “open source” ???
Stripe handles the actual card details, while Cape only receives the token, which cannot be mapped to your real credit card number. Stripe generates a token that is stored on cape’s systems to confirm a payment has been made. Cape does not store your credit card number. Cape does not associate tokens to subscribers
Just because it has options to clear junk doesn’t mean it has nothing to do with privacy.