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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 24th, 2023

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  • Thank you very much, we should always strive to back up claims with relevant links and data, no matter if it’s common sense or how trivial it might seem.

    While the quote and linked paper give a good picture of the VPNs and their controversies, such as ExpressVPN, CyberGhost, and PIA being under ownership of a less-than-trustworthy company which also happens to be specialized in malware and surveillance, I did not find anything that directly supported @[email protected]’s claim.

    The only controversy (except questionable ownership) I could find in the article was a few paragraphs lower regarding the Andrey Karlov assassination, where ExpressVPN denied the existence of logs but investigators somehow still managed to extract a serial number of a computer(?) after a datacenter raid. Not sure if I got that right, but it would fit the established profile from this comment chain:

    ExpressVPN, on the other hand, told investigators it did not have any logs or customer data on a server in Turkey, which was raided by Turkish authorities, according to Hurriyet Daily News. According to the site, authorities said the server was used to hide details regarding an assassination of a Russian ambassador. ExpressVPN released a statement about the incident.

    It’s almost midnight here, so please correct me if I missed something.

    Oh, and nice paper, has a good, natural flow and appears to keep technical jargon to a level where anyone should be able to draw well informed conclusions.





  • You tell us.

    Using PWA you’ll retain all the features and nice-to-haves of the app, while also preventing it from doing any weird magic to your files in the background. Sharing files from your main profile to your private profile is also as easy as opening the file in your main profiles file browser and clicking “share”.

    What is your threat/privacy level? How far are you willing to go, and what/how much is it that you want to keep private?

    I’m clearly too tired to make any sense. Please have a nice evening.




  • It was a message along the lines of “Your friend Ekky has started using Telegram, say hello to them”.

    Not sure if it was a notification or a message, but that was very uncanny and definitely felt scammy and abusive. It’s not the first time I’ve seen an app behave this way, though usually the app asks first.


  • Wait what? I thought Telegram pretty much was Discord but for people who prefer phones over computers.

    Wasn’t there also a controversy where some people believed that telegram was private and secure, but that only was for a very limited subset of their features?

    Disclaimer: I’ve only ever installed telegram once for one single person, but promptly removed it afterward for sending out messages to some of my contacts on its own, so I have no clue how it actually works. Feel free to correct or educate me.




  • Shut down the computer and disconnect it from the internet, if you haven’t already done so.

    With another computer (or your phone) download Spybot (i think it’s still considered one of the best free tools out there) and move it to your pc, let it run its scan, and check the results.

    Oh, and like @[email protected] stated, this isn’t foolproof, so if you want to be really sure, then follow their advice instead.

    Can’t say how this “hacker” got you with the provided information, but if he can put a file on your desktop, then he can likely see your files too. It wouldn’t happen to be one of your friends pulling a fast one on you?






  • I had a funny experience not too long ago. Not sure what to make of it, and it might have been a freak coincidence.

    A few friends and I were talking on discord, with one friend streaming his Steam discovery queue, not sure what game to play next. At some point we started talking about 2-D platformers, and after some time one of us pointed out how it seemed that we were seeing more platformens than before. One thing led to another, and we started screwing around talking about NSFW content. About 3-5 recommendations later, that one friend started getting porn game recommendations, and not long after about half of the games recommended were 18+ and kinda stayed that way.

    Obviously correlation does not prove causation, and it might have been a myriad of reasons such as him playing a trick on us, but I might be interested in knowing what Discord REALLY does with all this data it has access to.