RejZoR
RejZoR t1_iydftn2 wrote
Reply to comment by Daedelous2k in Telegram shares data of users accused of copyright violation following court order by asteriskspace
That's not true. It is widely known for a long time that only parts of it were encrypted and others were not. People who need actual encryption use Signal.
RejZoR t1_iydapel wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Gmail now learns from your behaviour, but there's a catch by Sorin61
I think you confused E2EE with Star Wars robot R2D2 :P
Ultimately, even when E2EE isn't used, the mailbox access is still fully encrypted. ProtonMail has to accept mail in whatever form on the ingress side, but once it's received, it's encrypted with your credentials. Something GMail or Outlook doesn't do at all as your mails are essentially stored there in plain text, only access to that plain text format is granted through correct password which is just for user side access, not for the operator aka Google. Only point they are encrypted is during transit from their mail server to another mail server. It's why GMail can do all sorts of clever mail sorting, combing and data extraction because they have all the access to your mails and ProtonMail cannot because they don't have such access. Only access they have is some metadata, mail addresses and subject lines for basic spam filtering and sorting. They have no access to mail body.
One could argue one could spy on users on the ingress side, but when you're that paranoid, you really need to ensure all participants in communication use E2EE using same clients, be it voice, mail or IM. Ultimately, even if ProtonMail wasn't encrypted, I'd use it because my primary goal was just stop using GMail. There are paid for services that claim to respect user privacy as you pay for the service where Google's "all this free shit" has to cost something else if it's free as service.
RejZoR t1_iycs7ib wrote
Reply to comment by goatfather1969 in Gmail now learns from your behaviour, but there's a catch by Sorin61
ProtonMail. Using it for years exactly because of shit like this. Good phone client, good web client, reasonable price and it's E2EE. So privacy is assured by default.
Just be aware that encryption inherently brings certain problems and limitations, like automatic forwarding is not possible, POP3/IMAP requires a "bridge" for communication between service and device running mail client.
RejZoR t1_iycrcjp wrote
Reply to Telegram shares data of users accused of copyright violation following court order by asteriskspace
I don't understand people whining and shitting on Telegram. Telegram is not above the law. If courd orders it, they have to comply.
There is however difference when company complies and what they can comply with. Signal or ProtonMail can't provide much information beyond basic communication information like IP and timestamps of communication. And at least for ProtonMail I know they often dispute requests through Swiss courts unless it's clear that user behind it was malicious.
RejZoR t1_iycqax2 wrote
Reply to comment by zholo in Eufy Security Cameras Have Been Uploading Unencrypted Footage Without Owners Knowing | Eufy apparently stores thumbnails on the cloud, even if you don't have a cloud account. by chrisdh79
Then there is Ring that's not Chinese and are just as terrible if not worse...
RejZoR t1_iycovo6 wrote
Reply to comment by ineedabuttrub in Google has to pay $9.4 million because it paid people to say they liked the Pixel 4 by RunOrDieTrying
Basically they paid "advertisers" 9.4 million bucks. That's not that much.
RejZoR t1_iwts6sd wrote
Reply to comment by Translationerr0r in 10,000 Google Employees Could Be Rated as Low Performers by ThisIsNotCorn
2 and a half mangos.
RejZoR t1_iwkhgox wrote
Reply to comment by capitalism93 in Apple will buy US-made chips from TSMC, confirms Tim Cook by Hrmbee
That's a pretty big one since TSMC wouldn't even exist without ASML. They make the machines that fab the chips.
RejZoR t1_iwcm86n wrote
Reply to comment by OneAd3613 in Android phone owner accidentally finds a way to bypass lock screen by redhatGizmo
How, when you're suppose to swap it out with different one.
RejZoR t1_iwb3rpz wrote
Reply to comment by OneAd3613 in Android phone owner accidentally finds a way to bypass lock screen by redhatGizmo
Turns out I'd need another SIM to test it and I don't have one. Annoying.
RejZoR t1_iw8gm8y wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Android phone owner accidentally finds a way to bypass lock screen by redhatGizmo
Just out of curiosity if anything has improved. It mostly hasn't. Have plans to buy Galaxy S23 if it'll be any good, but couldn't wait for that long.
RejZoR t1_iw7h9hz wrote
Reply to comment by masterhogbographer in Android phone owner accidentally finds a way to bypass lock screen by redhatGizmo
Thing with iPhones is, you know if you're affected or not. I've recently returned to Android and I have no clue if my Poco is affected or not. And knowing Xiaomi, it's either not affected because it's so modified or it is affected and won't be fixed even months after Google fixes it in AOSP repository.
RejZoR t1_iu9xnez wrote
Reply to Real life Overwatch 2 charm costs less than it does in game | A real-life Overwatch 2 charm of its Pachimari mascot costs less than its in-game equivalent, highlighting microtransactions in Blizzard’s free multiplayer FPS by chrisdh79
Overwatch 2 is money milking operation. And cows are stupid gamers paying absurd prices for cosmetics.
What's worse, with lootboxes in Overwatch 1 you could get really cool skins just for playing. In Overwatch 2 you get frigging nothing.
RejZoR t1_iu9wowe wrote
Reply to E.U. plans for only electric new vehicles by 2035 ‘without precedent’ by do_you_even_ship_bro
That's over a decade away. That's like saying "water will still be wet in 2035". Pointless statement.
At prices EV cars are being sold now, they are just not feasible. Every even most basic one cists 30k €. Unless EV's will cost the same as petrol cars cost now, good luck with full switch to EV's till 2035.
RejZoR t1_irf78e7 wrote
Reply to AI tool can scan your retina and predict your risk of heart disease ‘in 60 seconds or less’ by Abhi_mech007
I can look in a bag of chips and predict I’ll have heart issues…
RejZoR t1_iqqvhmy wrote
Reply to comment by Jaded_Prompt_15 in PM Modi tests drive a car in Europe remotely from Delhi using 5G, view pics by Royal-Noble-96
And before you’ll know it, there will be Indian taxi drivers everywhere driving straight from india lol
RejZoR t1_iqqv6ai wrote
We just went back some 40 years. Instead of clean sources we’re reverting back to coal…
Solid wood is probably most renewable and neutral if burned correctly when properly dry, but chipped stuff is often full of crap and people burn damp wood that just burns in most nasty ways.
RejZoR t1_iyez03g wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Gmail now learns from your behaviour, but there's a catch by Sorin61
I mean, that should be understandable by any internet literate person. It's like making a regular call and other person is using a speaker on the other end, on a crowded bus. Your end is private, the other end isn't. It's same with such communication.