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in these days of IoT devices that come built in with WiFi connectors and other phone-home devices, you can't even be sure about privacy anymore even if you didn't personally connect your devices online: they can and do automatically connect themselves.
If they have a path to the internet at large, which they won't if you properly secure your wireless AP.
They could of course come with a cell modem, but that's relatively expensive and would require cooperation from a cellular carrier. Manufacturers of two-bit crap don't like to spend any more than they need to, and the reason many devices have onboard wifi is that it costs nothing because it's built into the SoC they're using.
The real solution of course is not to purchase IoT garbage to begin with, such things tend to be bottom-dollar never-patched security nightmares even on a good day.
One of my son's stuffed teddy bears came with a built-in Wi-Fi interface that I didn't even know existed until someone managed to download a custom voice clip into it. It's only a small step from this to a toy that contains a hidden microphone and transmitter that uploads your conversations to some unknown server somewhere out there.
Yes yes, old news, such toys already exist (microphone included). Don't allow them to connect to your wireless (infrastructure), and don't have devices around that mindlessly try to connect to open networks in general (ad-hoc). Better yet, don't buy them to begin with.
Nobody makes talking teddy bears or "smart" toasters internet capable to spy on you, they do it because "cloud" is the cheapest possible way to implement the features they think will sell more units or because it allows them to milk you for some kind of subscription service.
The most effective thing you can do about this practice is to vote with your wallet and not buy such things.
My goal is more to protest
Riiiight. Who exactly do you think is noticing your "protest"? The same people whose "eyes" you are "opening" with constant whining and opining that "somebody" needs to do "something" about [childish adjective of the day] "evil" corporation?
Buying an off-the-shelf router and installing openwrt on it isn't protesting, the manufacturer made a sale and that's all they care about.
If you want to protest, go organise a protest.
If you ask me, the relentless ill-informed tinfoil-hat noise on this board is the biggest problem with Devuan right now. It's leading the wider community to view the whole distro as a "fringe OS for conspiracy theorists", and people are laughing at us. Please stop already, it's embarrassing.
Last edited by steve_v (2024-06-04 07:04:53)
Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. Three times is enemy action. Four times is Official GNOME Policy.
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If you ask me, the relentless ill-informed tinfoil-hat noise on this board is the biggest problem with Devuan right now. It's leading the wider community to view the whole distro as a "fringe OS for conspiracy theorists", and people are laughing at us. Please stop already, it's embarrassing.
For example?
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I'll waste my time fighting the search system for references just as soon as I see the same for claims of one specific wireless driver making a system more "private" or teddybears breaking WPA encryption.
Examples of people conflating the freedom to choose your init with general anti-establishmentarianism and standing up to "them" (whomever that means this week) shouldn't be too hard to find around here though. Guess I could revisit it, when I'm done arguing about python 3.12 targets in gentoo that is.
Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. Three times is enemy action. Four times is Official GNOME Policy.
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See, this is the crux of the problem: most people don't care about securing their WiFi router because that takes effort. And when something takes effort, the incentive is to do nothing except the default. Which will be insecure, because secure by default also means inconvenience, and manufacturers want maximum convenience in order to make more sales.
In the old days it took effort to hook up a device for online access. These days every toaster and its manufacturer's cool gadget actively want to be hooked up, with their corresponding apps automating most of the setup process. Why do people install these apps? Why do they agree to enter the WiFi password to connect the device online? Because part of the "cool features" of the IoT device they just splurged on depends on it. And nobody's gonna want to not use features they just ostensibly spent money on. So they will gladly enter Wi-Fi passwords for devices that they don't even know why it needs to have online access, because doing so lets them oh so cool control the gadget from their phones oh yeah!
Me, I'd never purchase anything that asks for online access that doesn't need to be. Nor input any password to some dumb device that I'm not confident doesn't have a ton of unpatched security holes from who knows how many years ago. But guess what's the percentage of the population that I represent? Probably some infinitesimal number. 😆 Nobody but geeks like us even know what the issue is, let alone care enough to do something about it. 99.9% of the world is insecure by default. Ignorance and apathy will be humanity's downfall, but who cares? 🤣
Anyway none of this really actually matters in this conversation. The only reason I brought this up was to point out the futility of this or that privacy concern while losing sight of the larger context of things. Security or privacy in isolation means nothing. You're just plugging one hole in a cheese grater. You need to consider the entire picture, instead of focusing on just one small point while so many other things defeat your purpose even before you began.
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@golinux well yes, you can be tracked wherever you go online. This is correct. The only place this can be false on is what files exist on your computer. That's not the level of privacy I find ideal... its mediocre to be honest.
The only place going online doesn't reveal, is your files on your computer.
That's privacy hanging by a thread.
Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. Feelings are not facts
If you wish to be humbled, try to exalt yourself long term If you wish to be exalted, try to humble yourself long term
Favourite operating systems: Hyperbola Devuan OpenBSD
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I discovered it recently, but judging by the requests, it happened a month ago - Firefox stopped supporting video calls on Facebook.
Although the FB website only talks about group calls, regular ones don’t work either.
A new round of “browser wars”.
https://www.facebook.com/help/287631408 … 1408243374
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@aluma and I doubt its because firefox is not capable of running it.
Its probably just FB refusing to let it.
Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. Feelings are not facts
If you wish to be humbled, try to exalt yourself long term If you wish to be exalted, try to humble yourself long term
Favourite operating systems: Hyperbola Devuan OpenBSD
Peace Be With us All!
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If it is simply FB rejecting it as @zapper has suggested then maybe try using a plugin to change the browsers useragent?
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@JWM-Kit assuming you can trick FB into believing your using something else.
I am not entirely certain if that's possible. I am more than 75% sure FB is playing a game though by claiming firefox won't work.
Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. Feelings are not facts
If you wish to be humbled, try to exalt yourself long term If you wish to be exalted, try to humble yourself long term
Favourite operating systems: Hyperbola Devuan OpenBSD
Peace Be With us All!
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On the fly I install firefox-esr then I replace .mozilla with my backed up turn all that shit off settings.
Of course when I network up it pulls in that Pocket shit, which I then have to disable, annoying because it is a waste of energy, time, and money.
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@bilhook pocket is garbage much like encrypted media extensions the DRM that pulls in widevine google codec only its actually worse cause there is zero reason for it to be enabled.
Last edited by zapper (2024-09-12 17:13:24)
Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. Feelings are not facts
If you wish to be humbled, try to exalt yourself long term If you wish to be exalted, try to humble yourself long term
Favourite operating systems: Hyperbola Devuan OpenBSD
Peace Be With us All!
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Blocking ads is just plugging a single hole in a cheesegrater. There are so, so, many other ways in which information about you, your browsing habits, and other such data can be, and are, collected every day. The moment you stepped online, you've basically already given up privacy. The only remaining question is the degree to which your privacy will be sacrificed. That it is non-zero is already indisputable.
I wonder if an analogy with the car's highways would be helpfull.
The moment you deside to go to city B from a main highway , third parties (including indifferent babies inside other cars on the same road) would know that someone with your face was on a certain time on a certain road propably heading towards a certain city. ...
So assuming that going somewhere using a shared network is intrinsically a social activity, that pushes anonymity aside. So maybe the real question is : In a social context where interaction are visible to many parties WHO of that parties is one that has the intention to use the shared info for purposes that we dont aggree with.
Last edited by chomwitt (2024-09-13 07:24:29)
Devuan(Chimaera)(Daedalus) DS+WM: XorgX11server+StumpVM
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The prescribed result, is a toxic level of mass hysteria for the patient, in this case, the news subscriber.
Maybe Richard Stallman could inform Mozilla that they are being wankers.
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@quickfur I missed that post you put on the first page. Well, there are certain folders you can download files onto. If you use firejail to limiting specific commands, you can limit which folders you download to, which also means only shared folders like Downloads or Desktop can have files downloaded to.
I have had that situation before. If your files have permissions of only "this user" they are unlikely to be used unless some zero day vulnerability hits.
Which is possible, I suppose. But its not constant. That's how I feel like this is.
For the most part that is my view. Some files might be i suppose looked at, but most not, unless using proprietary software of course.
Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. Feelings are not facts
If you wish to be humbled, try to exalt yourself long term If you wish to be exalted, try to humble yourself long term
Favourite operating systems: Hyperbola Devuan OpenBSD
Peace Be With us All!
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