I’ve recently learned of Njalla, created by one the founders of The Pirate Bay focused on providing true anonymity. Handy if take-down/DMCA notices are a problem for you.
Yup, thats how they provide anonymity to their customers: The domain is registered under their company name, providing their contact information to the public registrar; while transferring full control to you. This means any contact via whois goes to them instead of you or a less tolerant host.
They don’t provide a proxy/waf service by default, the dns records point to your ip/infrastructure just as any other domain does. You can however host via their vps services and/or route traffic through their vpn to hide your ip as well if you like.
I just keep thinking back to when Elon was trying to get Stephen King to pay for a blue checkmark and people told him "Twitter should be paying Stephen King."
The Facebook company’s new social platform is like Twitter, but for celebrities, brands, and annoying people.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't that just like Twitter?
On Wednesday, OpenAI and Microsoft were sued in a class action lawsuit seeking $3 billion in damages for allegedly stealing “vast amounts of private information” from internet users without consent in order to train ChatGPT.
This lawsuit, which was filed on June 28 in federal court in San Francisco, CA, and includes sixteen anonymous plaintiffs, claimed that OpenAI secretly “scraped 300 billion words from the internet” without registering as a data broker or obtaining consent. Microsoft is OpenAI's main customer and corporate partner, licensing AI technology from the company for billions of dollars.
I am sure that part of it is how discoverability has diminished over time. It seems there are fewer ways to find interesting independent things on the web. But, I'm also sure that some of it is there's fewer cool things to find.
With that said, please enjoy endless.horse, which is one of those cool things the likes of which I wish finding were easier.
"Microsoft Edge has many convenient features to improve browsing your experience" There we go. Seems like Microsoft doesn't make anything that isn't invasive any more.
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