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17 votes
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Adversarial interoperability
12 votes -
Paywalls everywhere you go? Get to the goodies with these two Paywall Ladder bookmarklets.
9 votes -
The gift of it's your problem now
11 votes -
Integrating using light
9 votes -
Giving bug-like, flying robots a boost
4 votes -
Jack Dorsey says shutting down Twitter API was the “worst thing we did”
6 votes -
How to find dangerous Log4j libraries
1 vote -
The art of the pause: Is anything on the internet real?
2 votes -
Internet literacy atrophy
4 votes -
High readability Wikipedia
9 votes -
Email forwarding services
Hello everyone. The other day, Firefox Monitor warned me that my personal e-mail was found on a data leak from Gravatar (belongs to Automattic; WordPress's parent company). Funnily, I don't have...
Hello everyone.
The other day, Firefox Monitor warned me that my personal e-mail was found on a data leak from Gravatar (belongs to Automattic; WordPress's parent company). Funnily, I don't have any account (and never had) with them, but nevertheless, I tried to log in, and it failed. I tried to recover my password, and it said "no e-mail found". Maybe a false positive from Firefox's side?
Anyway, that situation got me thinking that I should never use my personal email except on super important websites. For example, with Christmas gift buying, I've used my personal e-mail on multiple online websites (I usually try to avoid Amazon) and I shouldn't have done that.
Of course, Firefox recommended their own service Firefox Relay, which it does look interesting. Afterwards, I've searched on HackerNews to see what other people recommended.
These were the recommendations (apart from FF Relay):
A few questions:
- Do you use any of these three services?
- How happy are you with the service that you use?
- Is there something better?
I actually like Firefox's implementation because it is actually quite cheap (€12 per year), it is an easier way to support Firefox's development (instead of donation to the Mozilla Corporation) and I trust Firefox more on the security side of things. Nevertheless, the other two services seem more feature complete and I actually do not like that FF Relay "forces" you to use a domain like "alias@mozmail.com" or a custom domain like "alias@mydomain.mozmail.com". My goal would actually be "alias@mydomain.com" for my own contact with other people. On website registrations, @mozmail.com is okay, I guess.
I already have my own domain that I've bought from Namecheap and I think instead of associating an e-mail to my domain, I actually would prefer to use one of these services. The reason is that my website/e-mail domain could be reused if I stop paying. Some websites and/or people could have this e-mail and someone could impersonate me. With an e-mail forwarding service, I can easily and quickly delete/disable/change the alias. I'm not sure if I'm putting too much expectation on a forwarding service, but, I would like to know what do you think. 🙂
14 votes -
DuckDuckGo working on a standalone web browser for Mac & Windows
14 votes -
Vintage tech - The Sony eMarker
7 votes -
Facebook's reputation is so bad, the company must pay even more now to hire and retain talent
12 votes -
Fosscord: A work-in-progress chat platform compatible with Discord
13 votes -
helloSystem 0.7 released with big improvements
4 votes -
Setting yourself up for success before trying Fedora Silverblue
14 votes -
How Beijing influences the influencers
5 votes -
This week in GNOME #23 - Modernized settings
4 votes -
Here’s how to prevent (and recover from) a Facebook hack
5 votes -
LastPass is going to become an independent company
16 votes -
Pegasus vs. Predator - Dissident’s doubly-infected iPhone reveals Cytrox mercenary spyware
3 votes -
Reddit confidentially files to go public
28 votes -
“Imagine if doctors relied on Google as much as programmers do”
10 votes -
What Arduino-like kit do you recommend to get started with children?
Hi Tildes, I'm looking to introduce my children (aged 10 or so) to simple electronics (blinking lights, simple sensors, ...). I've played with Arduino in the past, but I see that there are now...
Hi Tildes,
I'm looking to introduce my children (aged 10 or so) to simple electronics (blinking lights, simple sensors, ...). I've played with Arduino in the past, but I see that there are now many competing options: Arduino, cheap rip-offs, RPi zero, adafruit, ESP32, ... It's easy to get lost!
Which do you recommend? Ideally, I'd like something cross-platform and open-source, easy to set up (ideally a kit with everything included), and of course not insanely expensive.
Edit: thanks everyone for the good advice! There are so many good options...
12 votes -
CentOS Linux 8 is about to die. What do you do next?
19 votes -
Log4Shell: We are in so much trouble
21 votes -
Norway's data privacy watchdog fines Grindr $7.16 million for sending sensitive personal data to hundreds of potential advertising partners without users' consent
7 votes -
Fixing a tiny corner of the supply chain
9 votes -
Scotty Allen of Strange Parts, YouTube channel update - "I have a brain injury"
5 votes -
China unleashed its propaganda machine on Peng Shuai’s #MeToo accusation. Her story still got out.
19 votes -
Winning the war on ransomware - The DOJ’s task force is changing the landscape around hackers, but will it be enough?
4 votes -
Keanu Reeves and Carrie-Anne Moss on making The Matrix Awakens with Epic Games
13 votes -
Humans are not instant—so why is all of our technology?
10 votes -
Interfacing with Zig, a BDFL-run project
6 votes -
But why that VPN? How WireGuard made it into Linux
8 votes -
VPN testing reveals poor privacy and security practices, hyperbolic claims
20 votes -
Open-source Vizio lawsuit takes an ugly turn
15 votes -
Retiring Alexa.com on May 1, 2022
9 votes -
Is there an open-source version of the Garmin Connect app for Android?
I am considering the purchase of a Garmin GPS watch, but I don't want to run the bloated Garmin Connect app on my phone. Really all I want, is the ability to pull coordinates from my watch (.gpx...
I am considering the purchase of a Garmin GPS watch, but I don't want to run the bloated Garmin Connect app on my phone. Really all I want, is the ability to pull coordinates from my watch (.gpx files) and put them on my phone or computer. Does a privacy-respecting app like this exist?
6 votes -
Chinese province targets journalists, foreign students with planned new surveillance system
8 votes -
Rust takes a major step forward as Linux's second official language
19 votes -
Thinking about calibre
18 votes -
Questions about Apple TV 4K (2021)
Hello everyone. Sorry if this is a long post. I currently have a dumb TV 1080p at home and, during my searches on Reddit and so on, I've chosen between the Nvidia Shield Pro and the new Apple TV...
Hello everyone.
Sorry if this is a long post.
I currently have a dumb TV 1080p at home and, during my searches on Reddit and so on, I've chosen between the Nvidia Shield Pro and the new Apple TV 4K, at the end, I've concluded to get the Apple TV because of the regular software updates. With the Shield, people are already complaining, and they aren't having updates for a while (but please, you can try to convince me otherwise).
My main objectives for the box are:
- Watching YouTube / HBO;
- Watching / Listening my local content (films, music, etc.);
- PC gaming streaming from desktop to the TV.
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About game streaming directly from my desktop, how good does it work? I saw people saying the Shield is better for gaming but, if I use AMD Link or Steam Link, I would think it does not matter if it is the Apple TV or Shield, or? Maybe the Shield has better support for GeForce Now, but I do not use the service.
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How easy is to watch / listen to my content that is currently on my laptop / desktop? I saw people simply saying to use Infuse or Plex and stream it to the Apple TV. Is there a better way?
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Are there things that I should be "careful" with the Apple TV? I remember the time that my wife bought our iPad, and it was hard to just find how to upload a TV series and run it with subtitles. (facepalm) There is no complexity like this on Android, honestly, no software to install on my pc, etc.
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I saw a lot of people complaining about the support of codecs on the Apple TV comparing to the Shield. Stuff like, no TrueHD audio, no DTS:X, no lossless audio pass-through, transcoding, etc. So many topics that got me confused, since I'm not an expert in this field. If my goal for the future is to buy an amazing 4K "smart" TV and soundbar that both have Dolby Vision and Atmos, and most of my content are local downloaded films or streaming from HBO or Netflix, how important are all of these missing "features" from the Apple TV? People also said to just use Plex or Infuse, and they will have the "audio features" that the Apple TV is natively missing. So, honestly, I didn't understand all the discussion regarding this and why was the Shield better if other apps can support the codecs and missing features.
I think that is all, thank you in advance for all the replies 🙂
8 votes -
Kartrak: The first barcode
3 votes -
Crime prediction software promised to be free of biases. New data shows it perpetuates them.
15 votes -
You are the product
4 votes -
Red Hat's CentOS Stream 9 Linux arrive
2 votes -
Apple broke up with me
8 votes