-
22 votes
-
Terrible, dangerous EARN IT act set to move forward in the senate; attack on both encryption and free speech online
27 votes -
Google starts deleting location history after eighteen months, by default
12 votes -
Facebook accused of trying to bypass GDPR, slurp domain owners' personal Whois info via an obscure process
9 votes -
Scott Alexander has deleted his Slate Star Codex blog due to the New York Times planning to reveal his real name in an article
48 votes -
Oracle's BlueKai tracks you across the web. That data spilled online.
5 votes -
Andrew Yang is pushing Big Tech to pay users for data
18 votes -
Moroccan journalist targeted with network injection attacks using NSO Group’s tools
2 votes -
What's wrong with email?
14 votes -
Norway's data inspectorate has banned the use of public health app Smittestopp to control the spread of COVID-19 over data protection concerns
9 votes -
Dating apps exposed 845GB of explicit photos, chats, and more
11 votes -
The most urgent threat of deepfakes isn't politics, it's porn
10 votes -
Privacy browser Brave under fire for violating users’ trust
23 votes -
Incognito mode detection still works in Chrome despite promise to fix
11 votes -
The great race to surrender our privacy (2019)
5 votes -
Schools turn to surveillance tech to prevent Covid-19 spread: "We are very much interested in the automated tracking of students"
6 votes -
Internet service provider Optus has been ordered to hand over the details of a customer accused of defaming a Melbourne dentist through a Google review
7 votes -
Black Lives Matter protesters aren’t being tracked with Covid-19 surveillance tech. Not yet
6 votes -
Introducing peer-to-peer Matrix
18 votes -
Employee monitoring software surges as companies send staff home
18 votes -
Grandmother ordered to delete Facebook photos under GDPR
12 votes -
Tracking the location history of military and intelligence personnel using the Untappd beer-rating app
11 votes -
Code is Speech?
10 votes -
New York Times phasing out all third-party advertising data
21 votes -
Introducing Signal PINs: A method of storing some account data (profile, settings, etc.) securely on Signal servers in case you lose or switch devices
16 votes -
Q Team is content that COVIDSafe is an innocuous application that should be considered safe to download for most people
5 votes -
The workplace-surveillance technology boom
4 votes -
A spectacularly bad Washington Post story on Apple and Google’s exposure notification project
3 votes -
Have you tried degoogling your Android?
In a pursuit of a more privacy-oriented mobile computing I've installed LineageOS ROM on my phone and decided to try living without Google Play Services, which usually provide aGPS (cell tower...
In a pursuit of a more privacy-oriented mobile computing I've installed LineageOS ROM on my phone and decided to try living without Google Play Services, which usually provide aGPS (cell tower geopositioning), push notifications and lots of other frameworks like Google Maps that apps use as libraries.
My phone has 4 primary uses:
- Communicator - mostly Telegram, WhatsApp and Slack. Email of-course.
- Navigator - GPS and Maps are an irreplaceable tool if you're living in a modern metropolis
- Internet browser - obviously
- Music Player - music on the go
So let's see how you're supposed to tackle each of the uses, while using as much FOSS as possible.
- System functionality - both push notifications and aGPS can be solved by microG - fake Google Play Services library. Not sure how it implements push, but aGPS is checked against Mozilla's geolocation database.
- Communications - Telegram is available on F-Droid (OSS app store), but everything else is not. The solution here is to use Aurora (Play Store front-end to rip APKs) and install them manually. Push notifications might be broken even with microG (WhatsApp is missing notifications for me, sometimes). AOSP email is fine, K9-mail is ugly but works somewhat better.
- Maps and navigation: OpenStreetMap is the obvious choice here and OsmAnd delivers the frontend. It has enough metadata for businesses to get you around, but compared to Google Maps it's can be sometimes lacking and/or out-of-date. Navigation itself is decent, but it's missing timetables for public transportation compared to GMaps, which can be a problem, especially if trains are cancelled or delayed. Overall it's very usable, almost feature complete, but I've found myself falling back to Google Maps in my browser when it comes to using public transport.
- Internet browser - Firefox, with uBlock Origin installed (yes, it works on Android) it's really good.
- Music Player - there are tons of music players available on F-Droid, you can pick whichever suits your needs. Here I actually stepped away from the FOSS and bought myself a PowerAMP license on developer's website. One of the rare moments where paid Android software is available outside of Play Store.
Now that the primary use cases are solved, let's try some other useful apps:
- E-banking? Broken without Google Play, app refuses to even start properly.
- Bike sharing? Taxi app? Public transport app? Broken without Google Maps libraries for the obvious reason. You might or might not be able to use the browser version, depending on the app.
- Reddit Relay/any app that requires the license? Okay you've ripped the APK with Aurora, but you can't buy the license to remove the ads.
- Ebook reader? Nothing good on F-Droid, have to rip something off Aurora.
Basically you have to be prepared to use your mobile browser a lot. And for some of the sites, do it in a "desktop mode" with tiny text, since the mobile version will just nag you to download the app, that might be broken.
The takeaway is simple - you give up A LOT of convenience just to cut off Google analytics (which you still might get with apps like Slack). It's certainly usable, don't get me wrong, but I still feel kind of stupid fumbling with OsmAnd when I'm out with my friends and trying to look something up. I'll probably end up going back to the stock ROM, or just installing the Google Apps. For me it was an experiment and I think I've got a general feel on how much information and use I'm actually getting out of GApps.
So Tildes, have you tried degoogling your phone? How did it go? Are you still using it?
28 votes -
Apple Store's temperature checks may violate EU privacy rules, says German data protection office
5 votes -
So this is how privacy dies
8 votes -
Contact tracing and privacy protection
4 votes -
Welcome to the age of privacy nihilism
13 votes -
Keybase, Zoom and Messaging
11 votes -
Firefox Private Relay - Generate unique, random, anonymous email addresses
33 votes -
Apple, Google ban use of location tracking in contact tracing apps
8 votes -
Why I Decided to Run a Tor Relay
9 votes -
Exam anxiety: How remote test-proctoring is creeping students out
9 votes -
Building a secure DNS infrastructure like SecureDNS.eu
5 votes -
Apple and Google’s COVID-19 exposure notification API: Questions and answers
4 votes -
Hyperdome - the safest place to reach out
5 votes -
Will you install the contact-tracing app on your phone?
Looks like governments around the world are going to start releasing tracing apps into the wild very soon. Now it's everybody's personal decision to install it or not. So my question to you,...
Looks like governments around the world are going to start releasing tracing apps into the wild very soon. Now it's everybody's personal decision to install it or not.
So my question to you, tilderinos: Are you going to install it? Why or why not? What would change your mind?
19 votes -
Nearly two years after Europe's GDPR privacy law came into effect, supporters are frustrated by lack of enforcement, poor funding, limited staff resources and stalling tactics by the tech companies
10 votes -
Showdown looms between Silicon Valley, US states over contact tracing apps
6 votes -
Stripe is silently recording your movements on its customers' websites
14 votes -
Community privacy concerns have forced the Australian Government to insist a coronavirus tracing app will neither track people's locations nor be available for law enforcement agencies to access
8 votes -
How China sees the world - And how the world should see China
11 votes -
How do/did all of you feel about posting your age on the internet?
(Semi-throwaway account because of personal details) This is prompted by /u/Adys comment to /u/Kuromantis. I'm currently 14, and online I've refrained posting my age on my main account (on this...
(Semi-throwaway account because of personal details)
This is prompted by /u/Adys comment to /u/Kuromantis.
I'm currently 14, and online I've refrained posting my age on my main account (on this site and others) to avoid it becoming a point in discussions (most prominently with politics, but any topic).- How do/did you feel about posting your age on the internet (in regards to being younger)?
- Do/did you feel like your decision made an impact on discussions?
26 votes -
Australian government plans to bring in mobile phone app to track people with coronavirus
3 votes -
Shelter in place with Shane Smith & Edward Snowden
3 votes