

I’m not the author. You can thank @rysiek@szmer.info for this amazing write-up
Mastodon: @Andromxda@infosec.exchange
wiki-user: Andromxda
I’m not the author. You can thank @rysiek@szmer.info for this amazing write-up
Wikipedia has way more donors, since it’s basically the only one of its kind. There is no Big Tech alternative to Wikipedia, so everyone just uses it by default. There are lots of other messengers though, so Signal isn’t the default choice.
Finally a good approach at raising money (other than donations)
Many European banks have their own contactless payment solutions. Here are some examples (it’s a German article): https://www.kuketz-blog.de/nfc-datenschutzfreundlich-bezahlen-mit-dem-android-phone/
They usually also work on (not European, but Canadian) GrapheneOS with no issues.
library = app
object code = app
machine code = app
binary = app
linker = app
bits = app
data = app
state = app
stack = app
heap = app
variables = app
memory allocator = app
memory = app
transistors = app
silicon = app
wires = app
pcb = app
electrons = app
leptons = app
package = app
Thunder is great. I also like Summit.
Btw if you’re still looking for an IRC client, check out Goguma. It’s a better, more modern looking alternative to Revolution.
I’m glad you like it. Consider making a post about your experience so far having switched from iOS to GrapheneOS. The community likes these kinds of posts. Don’t hesitate to use screenshots, etc.
Is there any advantage of doing that over just using an Email client like Thunderbird or FairEmail?
How can it play Java? Through custom mappings and adding it as a non steam game?
I recommend switching to desktop mode, installing Prism Launcher as a Flatpak, then creating an instance with the Fabric modloader, and installing a mod that provides good controller support, such as Controlify or MidnightControls.
Check out this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WRwJ8c4bTpA
Doesnt it run arch?
Yeah, it runs SteamOS 3, a modified, image-based Arch derivative maintained by Valve. Not to be confused with earlier versions of SteamOS, which were based on Debian.
And bedrock?
Since Android is based on Linux, you can run Android apps fairly easily on Linux-based systems. There’s a community-made launcher (https://minecraft-linux.github.io/), which leverages this advantage and lets you easily install and play the Android version. You can also get it as a Flatpak: https://flathub.org/apps/io.mrarm.mcpelauncher
“Proper” mobile Linux has never been a serious thing except maybe during the Nokia N900 era (It was released in 2009.). So I don’t really get what you’re trying to say with that statement.
I’m talking about developments such as postmarketOS, Ubuntu Touch/UBports, Phosh (mobile GNOME), Plasma Mobile, etc.
I see so many people here on Lemmy who are desperately waiting for Linux phones to replace their iPhones or Android phones, without realizing that idea is absolutely utopian and unrealistic.
An image-based system would be the bare minimum to achieve basic security, but there would still be so many security issues compared to Android and iOS, that I don’t think Linux phones are worth putting time and development effort into.
AOSP is a fantastic base for open source mobile systems. The FOSS mobile development community should rather shift its focus to AOSP, develop a good understanding of it and get familiar with the code, instead of trying to reinvent the wheel with mobile Linux distros.
I know about the security issues in desktop Linux, but I still think secureblue fits that level of the iceberg pretty well. I would put Qubes there as well.
You could add secureblue. I would put it in the same category as GrapheneOS and Vanadium.
Chromium-based browsers have arguably better security than Firefox. https://madaidans-insecurities.github.io/firefox-chromium.html
Vanadium further improves Chromium’s security by disabling the JS JIT Compiler, using a hardened memory allocator (GrapheneOS hardened_malloc) enabling ARMv8.5 MTE, and applying other hardening patches (https://github.com/GrapheneOS/Vanadium/tree/main/patches).
The secureblue project maintains a hardened Chromium build for Linux called Trivalent, which uses most of the patches from Vanadium, among others. You can get it from their repo: https://repo.secureblue.dev/secureblue.repo
Thankfully though, the US != the entire world
You don’t have to download anything, there are amazing streaming sites: https://fmhy.net/videopiracyguide
That’s why GrapheneOS had this feature for a long time, but with the ability to disable it. It also allows you to set the time period after which the reboot is initiated yourself. You can go as low as 10 minutes, or as high as 72 hours.
Please let me know if you ever find a good solution, I’d appreciate it