https://ngn.tf openpgp4fpr:f9e70878c2fb389aec2ba34ca3654df5ad9f641d
if you want to hide your IP or location then use TOR
Thank you so much for the explanation, I updated the post
whats the difference?
thats actually great thank you much!
I dont know how things work in the US but I dont understand how its possible for an ISP to control a device you own?
if you are using the ISP’s modem, yeah they probably have an interface to control the device remotely and i understand that - but if you using your own modem, with a different firmware, how are they even gonna access it?
My ISP provides fiber connection. I want a device that can provide 2.4Ghz and 5Ghz WiFi and 1Gig ethernet.
artix:
adding arch repos to artix results in bunch of package issues, after using it for a while it gets to a point where you have to specify 50+ --assume-installed
flags just to Syyu
i switched to arch just because of this
xorg letting a malicious program to record keys is not a security issue, its a weakness
having that malicious program on the system, thats the security issue
if you are implementing a display protocol that aims to replace the xorg, the focus should be compatibility not fixing security weaknesses especially if you dont have any better solutions, and wayland does not have a better solution for global keys, compositors are just implenting it on their own hacky way
it is but if 20 years later there are no apps that support xorg… well, you wont have the choice of running xorg
security? I don’t think systemd vulnerabilities are that critical, a vulnerability in systemd will provide a way to privesc at most, which means that the attacker must have initial access to exploit it. And considering that most linux servers are using containerized systems, a direct systemd exploit is not possible in most cases
also, more people using systemd means more devs working on systemd, so more security issues will be found and patched
“discussing privacy on discord” that should be a joke anyways i created [email protected] so join if you want
i dont think anyone using google services is “privacy conscious”
open source ppl likes shitting on free software ppl so yeah
thats actualy one of the reasons i stopped using matrix - synapse kept crashing my server lol
but i should also mention that XMPP servers have less documentation/tutorials, i spent an entire week just to get prosody to work as i wanted it to
i would argue that matrix is not decentralized enough (almost everybody is on matrix.org)
also all popular XMPP clients (conversations, gajim etc.) supports OMEMO and OpenPGP/PGP out of the box
just dont use those services? even if you find a way to bypass this, you wont get anything out of it, they will still collect all of your data such as your location, device information etc.
not going to school would be the best option
here you go, linux 0.01
![](https://lemy.lol/pictrs/image/78029443-c290-4887-81a8-3915ed25b17e.png)