

They never give up. After a bill attempt is buried, a new one is prepared just weeks afterwards.


They never give up. After a bill attempt is buried, a new one is prepared just weeks afterwards.


Thanks! I had exactly zero knowledge of any of those communities. I’ve just subscribed to all of them.


Thanks a lot! Just like before, I have these two questions:
-Do I need a pair? Or only one can be enough connected to the router, and then I can connect normal wifi clients (phones, laptops, an AP maybe) on the smaller shed?
-Can these be managed completely offline?


Thanks a lot! Would I need two of these devices? Or just the directional antenna hooked to the home router, then just any spare router to act as AP on the receiving shed?
EDIT: Additional question -> It seems to mention some cloud controller-options. Can these be managed completely locally via some local webUI?
I’m not too concerned about the TP-Link advisory in this case, as it wouldn’t be hooked to the internet directly (still needs to go through a non-TP-Link router), and this is in a rather sparse location far away.


Rest of the civilized world doesn’t execute.


Didn’t he just say he had no regrets about voting him in?
From now on, attending demonstrations like



Is there…any alternatives to TorrentGalaxy? I mean, somewhere to check what new movie releases are there, with a picture and IMDB link etc. I mean sure 1337x has the list of latest release, but you have to go clicking individually the links to see what each one’s about. I liked torrentgalaxy’s image navigation and movie grouping (it would attempt at catching a movie ID and put all the releases for that movie under related links).
Thanks I really appreciate elaborated comments about both. I think I’m going to skip the Tuta encryption for now. While it has a way of keeping it encrypted for the destination, it involves the final user having to click some links in order to open the encrypted mail. I mean…I think most of the people I’d write to would hate having to do extra steps just to see an email I wrote. So I guess I’d have to stick to unencripted, and then the advantage is kinda lost. I’d like a fully encrypted mailbox, yeah, but not at the cost of making it incompatible with any other app or email standards. I guess I didn’t have a great experience with Proton apps for Android.
Don’t take me wrong, I’d love to have a fully encrypted mailbox, but not by making it all cumbersome.
Hmmmmm I’d say Librem is US-based. Not to mention their whole mess with delivering pre-orders (and normal orders) of their Librem phone. Last time I checked they still didn’t fulfill most of their orders right? …Nah I think this shouldn’t be where to trust my email.
Sigh…right. But people DO need email. For banks. For taxes. For governments, healthcare, and lots of other crap.
So yeah, I’m skipping the whole “encrypted mailbox no-knowledge”, since it’s both cumbersome and useless unless anyone around you ALSO uses it (otherwise, those super private emails can be way more easily intercepted during transit than in your inbox anyway).
I just want some attempt at privacy from some EU nation while keeping some decent interoperability.
With that you mean it’s standard access IMAP/SMTP from any client you want, as opposed to Proton/Tutanota and their custom apps right? Yeah, I prefer a standard protocol and my own app.
Posteo
Wow…This one seems to be a very good one as well. How come it’s not even mentioned in privacytools.io or privacyguides.org?
Thanks, these are the kind of valid points I’m looking for. I noticed the lack of 2fa when I was registering for the demo, they only asked for a backup email or a phone number…neither too privacy-friendly there. But I guess I can live with that.
For what’s worth, I’m going to give it a shot on the month trial. But I already see the middle tier for 3€ offers 10GB email only. I think I can fit my current old mail backup in about 4GB, but it would be slightly tight, I guess. I’m on an older Proton plan which charges about 3USD per month (by-yearly) and it gets me about 20GB. I think shared between cloud and email (I’m not actually interested in the cloud part, I have Seafile for that).
I’d try avoiding email hosting. I’ve heard way too many times that it’s too much pain when it fails, and when it fails basically emails are bounced. I can’t afford to miss taxes emails or other important stuff.
I’m all for options, to be honest. What ideally I’d like is some sort of good encrypted email based in some safe European country, which can achieve decent Android integration. Proton apps are pretty useless to that effect (lack of offline basic functionalities, the calendar app isn’t even an android calendar provider). I’m not too hard in moving around my emails, since for the last few years I’ve been giving my email @duck.com which actually ends up sending to my final email after some tracking cleaning. Changing email provider would entail only updating my @duck.com destination.
Following up…Yeah, why not Startmail or Disroot? Startmail seems to offer more bang for the buck than Mailbox. I’m not sure how many aliases you get if you get a paid plan in disroot.
EDIT: I…misread. Startmail offers half-priced plan the first year, then goes ahead and doubles it, getting pricier than Proton, Mailbox and about everyone else I think.


That one should be a public service. Why limit it’s viewing rate when a lot of the country needs to view his idiocy fumbling for answers he obviously never thought of.


Nah…He’d still play the it was edited bullshit. The only thing that is nearly impossible to defend is “it was edited while being played live”. There, his embarrassments are his own, and they’re very very hard to downplay to any other causes.
They have no work left to be done.