Jerry on PieFed

Just a techie guy running feddit.online to allow people to communicate, make friends and acquaintances. Odd coming from a happy introvert, right? (https://jerry.hear-me.blog/about)

I also own these publicly available applications:
Mastodon: https://hear-me.social
Alternative Mastodon UI: https://phanpy.hear-me.social
Peertube: https://my-sunshine.video
Friendica: https://my-place.social
Matrix: https://element.secure-channel.net
XMPP/Jabber: https://between-us.online
Bluesky PDS: https://blue-ocean.social (jerry.blue-ocean.social) Mobilizon (Facebook Events Alt): https://my-group.events
and more…

  • 9 Posts
  • 25 Comments
Joined 1 年前
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Cake day: 2024年9月29日

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  • Wine requires Linux knowledge to get the configurations correct. I don’t think many Windows users will be able to get any Windows applications running under Wine. And it’s the same Wine that any Linux user can install for free.

    If Zorin came packaged with Crossover, then maybe it would run Windows apps better because Crossover would manage the Wine configurations and the required Windows infrastructure installs.

    Maybe.

    But not many old machines will have the capacity to run Linux, Wine, and a Windows application. But Zorin’s hype leads one to believe that a 15-year-old machine won’t struggle.




  • This is definitely the best protection. If the provider drops you, you move your domain to another provider. But, as far as I know, while almost all email providers will host your personal domain, none that I know of will do it on the free plans. But your email is your identity. You should be willing to pay for it, especially if you host it on a provider that otherwise won’t make any money on you.

    There are a couple of downsides. If you forget, or are unable, to renew your domain, you lose it and your emails. Make sure another family member or friend can pay the renewal for you if, for some reason, you cannot.

    While your own domain makes it far less likely that your email will be canceled (because you can move it), abuse of your domain can result in your losing your domain name and your email, especially before it has earned a reputation.

    Which brings up another IMPORTANT point. If you use your own domain name, then you must set up your DNS records to protect your domain from spoofers and spammers so it doesn’t get blacklisted or, worse, doesn’t cause cancellation of your domain name. Scammers and spammers WILL try to send email using your domain name. You need to tell email clients to toss these rogue emails and give them the means to determine spoofing and unauthorized use. Read this: https://www.valimail.com/blog/dmarc-dkim-spf-explained/

    Also, be aware that SpamAssassin considers .com, .net, and .org TLDs to be far safer than .world, .online, .blog, and most others. Using one of these newer TLDs results in a higher spam score, and your email is more likely to end up in the spam folder if it reaches the magic score of 5. A new age TLD can add as much as 1 point to the spam calculation depending on the email provider receiving your email.

    So your own domain name is safer but costs money and requires more work.



  • I deleted what I wrote before. If it federated, ignore it.

    Your browser is trying to find startpage.com on your local machine instead of the Internet.

    While on the VPN, open a command window and ping startpage.com. Does it return localhost or the real IP address? If it returns the real IP address, then the problem is related to the browser. Try another browser to see if it’s Vivaldi-related.

    If it returns localhost then maybe it’s a setting in protonVPN?

    This is strange. Just try to find clues.





  • Proton stores your encrypted private key . An encrypted private key does not allow them to read your email or files.

    When you log into a new device:
    Proton sends the encrypted private key to your device.
    You type your password.
    ** Your device** (not Proton’s server) uses the password to decrypt the private key locally in your browser or app memory.

    That decrypted key is then used to decrypt your emails on your device. Proton mail sends you just the encrypted text.

    There is one potential security issue:

    Since Proton serves the website code (HTML/JavaScript) that performs the encryption, you have to trust that they serve you honest code. Proton could theoretically alter their website code to capture your password the next time you log in, which theoretically a government can force them to do.

    However, this is a different threat than “they have the keys.” Currently, they possess the keys only in a form they mathematically cannot unlock.



  • I read the post and understood the problem. Then I read Dan’s reply. And he’s fixing it. In fact, he’s fixing it in the exact way the blog post says it should be fixed, “… but those filters should be manually triggered and always removable.”

    Here’s Dan’s reply:

    “… I hear the community: you want text-only posts. We are going to build this as an opt-in feature. If you want microblogging, turn it on. If you prefer the classic media-only experience, nothing changes.”

    Why was this blog post even written then? Now it’s seeming to be personal.