UprisingVoltage

@UprisingVoltage@feddit.it

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UprisingVoltage,

This is very useful actually, how did you get those?

UprisingVoltage,

No, I use my devices for different purposes and I don’t have any interest in them communicating

UprisingVoltage,

Electric cars do not address any of the main issues cars bring to our society, which are:

  • Pollution – Cars are responsible for a significant amount of global and local pollution (microplastic waste, brake dust, embodiment emissions, tailpipe emissions, and noise pollution). Electric cars eliminate tailpipe emissions, but the other pollution-related problems largely remain.
  • Infrastructure (Costs. An Unsustainable Pattern of Development) – Cars create an unwanted economic burden on their communities. The infrastructure for cars is expensive to maintain and the maintenance burden for local communities is expected to increase with the adoption of more electric and (someday) fully self-driving cars. This is partly due to the increased weight of the vehicles and also the increased traffic of autonomous vehicles.
  • Infrastructure (Land Usage & Induced Demand) – Cities allocate a vast amount of space to cars. This is space that could be used more effectively for other things such as parks, schools, businesses, homes, and so on. We miss out on these things and are forced to pile on additional sprawl when we build vast parking lots and widen roads and highways. This creates part of what is called induced demand. This effect means that the more capacity for cars we add, the more cars we’ll get, and then the more capacity we’ll need to add.
  • Independence and Community Access – Cars are not accessible to everyone. Simply put, many people either can’t drive or don’t want to drive. Car-centric city planning is an obstacle for these groups, to name a few: children and teenagers, parents who must chauffeur children to and from all forms of childhood activities, people who can’t afford a car, and many other people who are unable to drive. Imagine the challenge of giving up your car in the late stages of your life. In car-centric areas, you face a great loss of independence.
  • Safety – Cars are dangerous to both occupants and non-occupants, but especially the non-occupants. As time goes on cars admittedly become better at protecting the people inside them, but they remain hazardous to the people not inside them. For people walking, riding, or otherwise trying to exercise some form of car-free liberty cars are a constant threat. In car-centric areas, streets and roads are optimized to move cars fast and efficiently rather than protect other road users and pedestrians.
  • Social Isolation – A combination of the issues above produces the additional effect of social isolation. There are fewer opportunities for serendipitous interactions with other members of the public. Although there may be many people sharing the road with you (a public space), there are some obvious limitations to the quality of interaction one can have through metal, glass, and plastic boxes.

(Batantly copypasted from the pinned thread on r/fuckcars)

UprisingVoltage,

Eternity for lemmy is peak user experience imo

manuel, to linux Italian
@manuel@mastodon.uno avatar

Giorno, devo mettere una distro per un nuovo utente, cosa mi consigliate? Volevo mettere una con e snapshot integrati..
@gnulinuxitalia

UprisingVoltage,

Linux mint cinnamon e non sbagli.

Se l’utente è giovane consiglio ZorinOS (usa una versione di gnome con dei preset per rendere l’esperienza utente simile a quella di windows o macos) ugualmente facile da utilizzare ma ha un design più moderno e piacevole.

Se vuoi una distro user-friendly con KDE ti consiglio tuxedoOS, base debian mantenuta da tuxedo computers, un’azienda tedesca che produce laptop linux. Ovviamente la distro è foss e installabile su qualsiasi sistema

UprisingVoltage,

Absolutely agree. It’s counterintuitive, but waking up earlier than you need to and start your day slowly actually makes you feel more rested and calm (provided you’ve still slept sufficiently)

UprisingVoltage,

Privacy redirect has been discontinued for years, I strongly suggest using libredirect

UprisingVoltage,

Seems like rocksteady is not involved in this one. For better or worse

UprisingVoltage,

Newpipe is in active development and just updated a few days ago, they just have a slow release schedule.

I use tubular and it’s great, but Tubular itself is still subject to newpipe’s release cycle.

Not sure why people started thinking newpipe is unmantained, this is the second time I hear it here on Lemmy

UprisingVoltage,

Play store is preinstalled on billions of devices, F-Droid is only used by a bunch of (very based) nerds.

Google is most definitely not scared of F-Droid

UprisingVoltage,

If you have android 11+ (which has support for wireless debug), this is the best way.

Tutorial for the uninitiated. Looks complicated at first but after you’ve done it once you’ll breeze through it from that time on

UprisingVoltage,

Source?

UprisingVoltage,

I was curious whether some scandal about data being sent to russian govt had emerged after the war, but apparently things are as they used to be.

Mind you, AVs have a scary control over your system, and I totally respect not wanting to use one headquartered in Russia (and since the government security agencies have ties within those companies even in the “free world” (lmao) it’s safe to assume Russian govt has them inside Kaspersky too).

With that being said, kaspersky is actually a multinational corporation present in many areas of the world, I wonder how much influence Moscow actuallt has over them.

UprisingVoltage,

I agree and I also support the “common sense is the best av” argument, but for less tech savy people and workplaces I do think it’s necessary to have a last hope safety net against malware

UprisingVoltage,

Kaspersky has faced controversy over allegations that it has engaged with the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB)—ties which the company has actively denied. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security banned Kaspersky products from all government departments on September 13, 2017. In October 2017, subsequent reports alleged that hackers working for the Russian government stole confidential data from the home computer of an American National Security Agency contractor via Kaspersky antivirus software. Kaspersky denied the allegations, reporting that the software had detected Equation Group malware samples which it uploaded to its servers for analysis in its normal course of operation.[13] The company has since announced commitments to increased accountability, such as soliciting independent reviews and verification of its software’s source code, and announcing that it would migrate some of its core infrastructure for foreign customers from Russia to Switzerland. In November 2020, Kaspersky finished relocating the data of its customers from Russia to Switzerland.[14][15] The company has also opened multiple transparency centers in Switzerland, Brazil, Canada, Spain and Malaysia which allow state agencies, government experts and regulators to review its source code.[16][17]

UprisingVoltage,

Newpipe is in active development, new versions just take a while to be released

UprisingVoltage,

Cookies (3rd and 1st party) can be disabled per site from your browser settings in any modern browser.

JS can be disabled per site using uBlock origin for sure, and I’m pretty sure you can disable iframes as well

I admit I’ve never used uMatrix, but from what I know ublock is the successor of the project (and is considered the state-of-the-art adblocking software), so I’d assume you can do everything uMatrix can and more.

I suggest looking up some tutorials for uBlock to get the grasp of the possibility of the software

UprisingVoltage, (edited )

Most of the “privacy” extensions do little to nothing to protecy your privacy as of today, due to them either being abandoned, replaced by features integrated in ublock origin or just not relevant anymore because of the actual fingerprinting strategies employed at the current time.

And it is not “random uhh acktshually🤓 lemmy user” who’s saying this, but the wiki section of the arkenfox user.js project. github.com/arkenfox/user.js/wiki/4.1-Extensions

Installing them only expands the attack surface of your browser, consumes resources and makes you more fingerprintable.

They are remnants of a time when you needed a full day and a degree in CS to properly set Firefox for privacy. Luckily, things are more straightforward nowdays.

Temporary containers:

TC is no longer maintained. While TC provides sanitizing, and uses a dFPI-compatible API, this is not why it is recommended as optional […]

️Sanitizing in-session is a false sense of privacy. They do nothing for IP tracking. Even Tor Browser does not sanitize in-session e.g. when you request a new circuit. A new ID requires both full sanitizing and a new IP. The same applies to Firefox.

uMatrix:

No longer maintained, the last release was Sept 2019 except for a one-off patch to fix a vulnerability Everything uMatrix did can be covered by prefs or other extensions: use uBlock Origin for any content blocking.

ClearURLs:

Redundant with uBlock Origin’s removeparam and added lists. Any potential extra coverage provided by additional extensions is going to be minimal

LocalCDN:

Third parties are already partitioned if you use Total Cookie Protection (dFPI)

Replacing some version specific scripts on CDNs with local versions is not a comprehensive solution and is a form of enumerating badness. While it may work with some scripts that are included it doesn’t help with most other third party connections

CDN extensions don’t really improve privacy as far as sharing your IP address is concerned and their usage is fingerprintable as this Tor Project developer points out. They are the wrong tool for the job and are not a substitute for a good VPN or Tor Browser. Its worth noting the resources for Decentraleyes are over three years out of date and would not likely be used anyway

Cookie autodelete

Sanitizing in-session is a false sense of privacy. They do nothing for IP tracking. Even Tor Browser does not sanitize in-session e.g. when you request a new circuit. A new ID requires both full sanitizing and a new IP. The same applies to Firefox

Cookie extensions can lack APIs or implementation of them to properly sanitize e.g. at the time of writing: Cookie Auto Delete

As of Firefox 86, strict mode is not supported at this time due to missing APIs to handle the Total Cookie Protection

Consent-o-matic:

No user.js reference here, but I expressed my doubts about it in the comments yesterday feddit.it/comment/6471917

Bypass paywalls clean:

While it’s amazing, it’s also available as a filter list, from the same author

In short, don’t bother with more extensions. Just add ublock filters when/if needed, but this is one case where you get 80% of the result with 20% of the effort (FF strict privacy protection mode, ublock origin, switch search engine)

Also, weirdly enough, nobody mentioned the bitwarden extension. Thanks to that (but not only), they manage to provide an amazing password manager service for free, the paid options are cheap, it’s full featured, well integrated with the browser, open source and self hostable.

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