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34 votes
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Using Tails when your world doesn't feel safe anymore
31 votes -
Brazil bans Sam Altman's tech firm Tools for Humanity from paying for iris scans
23 votes -
Hacking Subaru: Tracking and Controlling Cars via the STARLINK Admin Panel
18 votes -
Unique 0-click deanonymization attack targeting Signal, Discord and hundreds of platform
50 votes -
Why I make smart devices dumber: a privacy advocate's reflection
36 votes -
Supreme Court seems ready to back Texas law limiting access to pornography
20 votes -
Texas sues Allstate Insurance over its collection of driver data
26 votes -
Five things privacy experts know about AI
19 votes -
Candy Crush, Tinder, MyFitnessPal: See the thousands of apps hijacked to spy on your location
65 votes -
Russia carves out commercial surveillance success
5 votes -
Google faces US trial for collecting data on users who opted out
39 votes -
Walled gardens, privacy, SEO and the open internet
Hey all! So I was thinking of how when looking at privacy, having a platform being a walled garden (i.e. data not being found on search engines) can feel like a worse experience for what is...
Hey all!
So I was thinking of how when looking at privacy, having a platform being a walled garden (i.e. data not being found on search engines) can feel like a worse experience for what is regarded as the open internet.
I don't have a solid solution for this. So my question to you is,
How do you respect privacy while sharing content for search engines on a platform?
13 votes -
Google’s ad policy changes to allow device fingerprinting
50 votes -
Private DNS (DoT) on Embedded / IOT Android Devices - Help With Connection Errors
Good evening, everyone. I was wondering if any of my fellow Tilders had experience with using Android's Private DNS feature on unconventional android devices e.g. WearOS, Android TVs etc. It was...
Good evening, everyone. I was wondering if any of my fellow Tilders had experience with using Android's Private DNS feature on unconventional android devices e.g. WearOS, Android TVs etc.
It was quite easy to figure out exactly how to set up an alternative DNS server on these devices. By default, Google has hidden the private DNS setting on them, but it is still accessible from ADB. In both of my examples it is likely easiest to enable “Wireless Debugging”, pair the devices successfully, and then run the commands.
settings put global private_dns_specifier one.one.one.one(replace this with the pertinent server!!)
settings put global private_dns_mode hostnameThe issue I have been running into, however, is if there is seemingly any form of content filtering enabled on the DNS server of your choice, the WearOS device seems to think internet is unavailable when first connecting. If you open the Settings app and leave it open for long enough on the Wi-Fi page, it will switch from “Internet not available” to “Connected”. Contrary to this, if you open an app like Samsung Internet for, it does not take this time and just refuses to use any configured Wi-Fi network.
To go into my specific situation in a little more detail, I use NextDNS configured with Hagezi Multi PRO++ block list. I have no issues on my S24+ with regard to internet being deemed unavailable by the OS (sure the occasional public Wi-Fi network blocks DoT—I just use mobile data then). I have also yet to try it on my Smart TV, which is frankly the more important target device than my watch (I will get around to it in the new year once the holidays are over).
This is all a potentially very convoluted way to ask what people's experiences are with this, and if they have faced similar problems to me when using providers like NextDNS, AdGuard etc. that provide content filtering options on their encrypted DNS connections.
Merci beaucoup !
4 votes -
MasterCard sells my transaction data in "anonymised" form; but I get targeted spam related to credit card use. How does it work?
26 votes -
Your partner asks for your phone, you refuse over privacy, they tell you they don't trust you. How do you respond?
This is a hypothetical question.
42 votes -
New website shows you how much Google AI can learn from your photos
31 votes -
Tips for increasing online privacy (without going insane)?
I've been researching internet privacy and fell down the rabbit hole of...well, internet privacy. I started with deleting Facebook/Instagram and switching to fire fox + plugins. I would like to...
I've been researching internet privacy and fell down the rabbit hole of...well, internet privacy. I started with deleting Facebook/Instagram and switching to fire fox + plugins. I would like to make more improvements but I really have no idea how, it started with deleting socials and next thing you know I'm looking at LineageOS and de-googling.
If anyone has any suggestions on where to go next while staying realistic/not going crazy, i would love to hear them. I am not really sure where to set my expectations, basically I would like to have more control of my data. The other day Google photos gave me a memory recap which kind of creeped me out! I am suddenly not fond of whatever is going on under the surface of Google photos that's making collages and trying to sell my photo books. Also g-board giving me a pop up in the text prediction row asking me to rate the app??? Ew.
I am a fan of self hosting and run a small NAS (open media vault) but this too quickly turns into the privacy spiral and leaves me thinking I should throw my phone into a river and live in the forest. Would love to hear your thoughts/advice/opinions!
54 votes -
EFF's Red Flag Machine: Guess why GoGuardian flagged a site
22 votes -
I don't own a cellphone. Can this privacy-focused network change that?
19 votes -
What's worse than ads and AI? Ads in your AI, so Google is testing it.
30 votes -
What To Use Instead of PGP
18 votes -
Lawsuit: City cameras make it impossible to drive anywhere without being tracked | "Every passing car is captured," says 4th Amendment lawsuit against Norfolk, VA
52 votes -
Passwords have problems, but passkeys have more
35 votes -
Game Freak acknowledges massive Pokémon data breach, as employee info appears online
16 votes -
What Facebook has done to us
20 votes -
Follow-up to an earlier topic I made about my hunt for a privacy-respecting notes app
after the comments in my previous topic, I proceeded to try Notesnook and Joplin after having issues with Nextcloud Notes (that I have already documented in my previous post) Notesnook ain't bad...
after the comments in my previous topic, I proceeded to try Notesnook and Joplin after having issues with Nextcloud Notes (that I have already documented in my previous post)
Notesnook ain't bad if it's your jam. I found it easy to use and quite nice U.I. the only dings against it (obviously subjective) is that it really isn't supportive of markdown in an easy way, you have to pay for it cause there's no self-hosting option and you have to pay for the ability to have more than 5 tags.
Joplin's only ding imo is just that it has no web browser interface, but beyond that, there's nothing else fuctionality-wise I can really count against it, the U.I. is rather dated but the functionality is so stable that I am more than willing to deal with a dated UI. and I can self-host using my nextcloud instance so that's a great plus in avoiding additional charge.
So I personally recommend Joplin if you don't care about a dated UI in order to avoid having to pay a subscription if you are willing to self-host.
In other news, by the time I finally imported all my Nextcloud notes to Joplin, the nextcloud Notes App had managed to wipe 60 of my notes empty. I love nextcloud and its let me do wonderful things but the notes app they have is incredibly buggy when combined with their android app and how they are trying to implement markdown support.
11 votes -
Hackers take control of robot vacuums in multiple US cities, yell racial slurs
37 votes -
Your chatbot transcripts may be a gold mine for AI companies
25 votes -
PimEyes says Meta glasses integration could have ‘irreversible consequences’
23 votes -
Acoustic cameras, motion amplification, and reading someone’s pulse through a video call
10 votes -
Paypal opted you into sharing data without your knowledge
90 votes -
SS7: A mobile network operator protocol with scary vulnerabilities
29 votes -
While web browsers warm to AI services, holdouts remain including Vivaldi
21 votes -
Did your car witness a crime? Bay Area police may be coming for your Tesla — and they might tow it.
28 votes -
Oracle's $115 million privacy settlement: What consumers should know
22 votes -
In leak, Facebook partner brags about listening to your phone’s microphone to serve ads for stuff you mention
48 votes -
Google must destroy $5 billion worth of user data illegally collected in Incognito Mode
55 votes -
How the rise of the camera launched a fight to protect Gilded Age Americans’ privacy
13 votes -
Tell San Mateo County: Stop for-profit tech companies denying mail to incarcerated people
23 votes -
Google Chrome warns uBlock Origin may soon be disabled
82 votes -
Google halts its four-plus-year plan to turn off tracking cookies by default in Chrome
36 votes -
[SOLVED] Looking for help getting my VPN to work with Firefox privacy settings
I recently moved to a new place with a new ISP, and my Mullvad VPN isn't playing nicely with Firefox like it used to. Can any of you networking gurus please help me troubleshoot? When the VPN is...
I recently moved to a new place with a new ISP, and my Mullvad VPN isn't playing nicely with Firefox like it used to. Can any of you networking gurus please help me troubleshoot?
When the VPN is enabled, most requests from the browser fail immediately. If I pull up the dev tools Network tab, I can see that these requests fail with an
NS_ERROR_FAILUREmessage before any data is transferred.I have Firefox configured to use "strict" Enhanced Tracking Protection. When I reduce it to "standard" my requests go through.
I'm also trying to use DNS over HTTPS with a custom provider (Mullvad, via
https://dns.mullvad.net/dns-query). I'm configuring this in Firefox, using the "Increased Protection" DoH setting. When I do that, Firefox reports the DoH status as "Status: Not active (NS_ERROR_FAILURE)". This happens even when Enhanced Tracking Protection is set to "standard" — in other words, that reduced setting fixed theNS_ERROR_FAILUREfor HTTP requests, but not for DoH.So how do I fix this so Strict Enhanced Tracking Protection, DNS over HTTPS, and Mullvad all work together? I never had this problem with my old ISP, so I suspect something's being blocked at the WAN level that I need to circumvent.
- OS: macOS Sonoma 14.5
- VPN protocol: WireGuard
- ISP: AT&T Fiber
I'm just using the official Mullvad client app with mostly default settings. The fiber gateway modem/router came with some default packet filtering firewall rules but I disabled everything in the admin panel. Weirdly, rebooting my machine fixed this temporarily, but the next time I disconnected/reconnected the VPN it broke again. Other browsers (with default settings and no DoH) are working fine when the VPN is connected.
Edit: Solved! Solution here.
6 votes -
Elon Musk says he’s moving SpaceX and X from California to Texas, blames new trans privacy law
28 votes -
"Privacy-Preserving" Attribution: Mozilla disappoints us yet again
68 votes -
AT&T says criminals stole phone records of ‘nearly all’ US customers in new data breach
26 votes -
Google Chrome ships a default, hidden extension that allows code on *.google.com access to private APIs, including your current CPU usage
69 votes -
Most reliable privacy-conscious notes app?
as the title indicates, I am in search of a reliable privacy-conscious notes app, I have tried the following which have the indicated bugs that I frequently experience and make the notes app feel...
as the title indicates, I am in search of a reliable privacy-conscious notes app, I have tried the following which have the indicated bugs that I frequently experience and make the notes app feel unreliable or just too inconvenient:
- NextCloud Notes:
- https://github.com/nextcloud/notes/issues/1187
- bug is that sometimes I have to rename a note 2-3 times in the browser for it to take
- bug where the pop-up menu doesn't go away after favoriting a note
- and the nextcloud android app has its own slew of issues
- StandardNotes app: I remember the app being really buggy on Firefox to the point where I had to regularly use Brave just for that app.
32 votes -
The asymmetry of nudges
21 votes