LXMF: lxmf@4804baaf06a5fc8a2e6a143154c10336
the only solution is to refuse AI commits, but you need to find out that an LLM was used…
that’s more of a 301(moved permanently)
yeah, just that I like the protocol design better. also GPG isn’t that great, so maybe sending files encrypted with ssh or age(or lxmf uri messages)
I agree that with linux, once you’re in, you’re in. there is virtualization but that’s annoying and slow, or ig you could not use internet(pretty much impossible) or very strict firewall rules, and then use some kind of proxy but that would not be a problem if it were hacked, and would resend the data but maybe fromna reader mode, which you could display with a minimalist browser.
I doubt openbsd supports the fp4, or even the pinephone.
that’s why I said ‘ideal’…
yeah, the solution is to use a provider which is not a company.
SS is a weird name but ok.
the year of the linux mobile has come!
what about more minimal office apps, like calligra?
POP is better than IMAP, the emails get deleted from the servers.
the thing with proton is you don’t really know that they’re private and they pretty much always collaborate with the police and their android vpn app collects some data that it doesn’t need to. I would suggest you:
I like XMPP, but there’s also LXMF(a bit more experimental, only for ‘advanced’ users) or simply signal or simplex.
whatsapp is a modified XMPP, itnmight be possible to make an XMPP client that can also use the whatsapp servers.
I would reccomend XMPP(with OMEMO), for android I reccomend the conversations client, but there are a lot of clients: https://xmpp.org/software/?platform=all-platforms I suggest you choose a client that fully supports OMEMO encryption.
check out https://soatok.blog/2025/01/14/dont-use-session-signal-fork/ and https://soatok.blog/2025/01/20/session-round-2/ . session doesn’t even have PFS(perfect forward secrecy), which can be very useful, so if a key is cracked, then only a few messages can be decrypted. EDIT: that was a lot of typos!
maybe it was a 200 with an html meta redirect, and the cat didn’t support html :(