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HelloDarkness
36b4767bcbc2bc95e2079f720e324f327231fdf9d3e401392ce6021e803c33a8
Currently Run Bitcoin Node, Tor Exit Relay, Nostr Relay. Open Source Contributor

Love it. I'm super stressed these days but managing to squeeze in a few workouts a week. Don't think I'd be functional without them. Really helps to get moving doesn't it!

In the future, everyone will want to be anonymous for fifteen minutes.

#privacy

I agree. If it was just the relay/key model that was holding Nostr back, the Fediverse would be massive now. But people tried Mastodon instead of Twitter / Kbin instead of Reddit and very few people stayed.

Having to manually curate your feed means it's just less compelling.

I love Mastodon and check it once a day lol. My Facebook buddies have it open in a tab all day. It's addictive by design.

Totally agree on TG. I wish more groups would use Matrix. I know not everyone likes the federated model but in terms of ease of use Vs privacy and control etc it's a good balance and a huge step up from TG/WhatsApp/whatever

Happy to give some choice privacy advice to someone who clearly understands what I'm doing.

1) Get an anonymous Internet connection (if you can). In the US you can get an unlimited, unthrottled 5G hotspot for $500/year from The Calyx Institute, which is both a good deal and helps support digital freedom. You can register anonymously, pay with Bitcoin, and have the hotspot shipped to a FedEx pickup point so you don't have to give up your address. It will still reveal your rough geographic location by IP, but nobody is socially engineering your name from the carrier. Outside of the US you can often buy data SIMs with cash, which have similar advantages. The upper-tier 5G hotspot from Calyx has an Ethernet port and built-in OpenVPN capabilities, so you have some serious options with the right equipment.

2) Use a VPN whenever you can. Not just an app on your device, consider getting a router that supports VPN client mode (or just install OpenWRT), and use a VPN like Mullvad to route your whole home network through a tunnel. Stop using Google and Apple VPNs, who do you think you're protecting yourself from! Use different VPNs/Exits for different purposes.

2a) Stack privacy. You can route a VPN over a VPN. You can connect to Tor over that too. Performance takes a hit, but that's a small cost for multi-tiered anonymity.

3) Separate sensitive tasks between your devices. Some things in life are more private than others, so make sure you know what to trust. Your Facebook app shouldn't be on the same device as a Bitcoin wallet, or at least not on the same user profile. Keep multiple phone and PC logins for different purposes. Keep multiple networks for your devices, and route them through different VPNs. Have a laptop just for Bitcoin. Have a laptop just for porn. Laptops and android devices are cheap, compartmentalize your digital life for privacy and safety.

4) Avoid corporations wherever you can. Use ProtonMail instead of Gmail. Use Linux instead of Windows or Mac. De-Google your phone with LineageOS or CalyxOS, and start taking app hygiene seriously. Use FOSS alternatives whenever you can, even if you like the proprietary version better.

5) Never self-host at home unless you have a dedicated ISP and network for it. It's a ton of fun as a hobbyist, but it's not good for privacy. Never let your home become an attack surface. Find a smaller cloud provider that accepts Bitcoin and rent resources pseudonymously where you need them, or go hardcore and host your own ASN out of a small rack somewhere.

5a) Furthermore, know your rights when registering domains. For example, you may feel patriotic buying a .US domain, but it is trivial to retrieve your full whois contact info from .US domains, and they will more aggressively enforce a real address requirement.

6) Never trust bleeding-edge tech. New technology is exciting, but it's full of bugs and mistakes. The newest version of something is often the worst version of it. When the web3 hype machine tells you that Nostr is the future of private social media, don't take their word for it, look for the evidence. If there isn't any, proceed with caution.

7) Embrace a zero-trust philosophy. Every actor is a potential bad actor, so build a moat. Don't get mad if you get pwn'd, black hats and gray hats (howdy) will target you, so be prepared for it, and learn everything you can from your mistakes and the mistakes of others.

I'd go further. Don't trust commercial VPN or email providers and host your own. Low end boxes are cheap and can be paid for anonymously

Or just don't use Umbrel, etc and learn how to roll your own. Otherwise you're just trusting someone else anyway, just a different someone...

I'd love to know whether the "qualified investor" stuff exchanges have to do in the UK now actually stops anyone from buying.

Seems ludicrous and pointless to me.

Thanks! Will give nostrpy a shot. It's a 1.6ghz netboox with a tiny screen so browser based clients aren't fun to use. But I have gomuks for matrix and aerc for email. Trying to get a full workflow just for fun 😁🖥️

For fun I'm reviving a 32 bit machine. Any good cli nostr clients? #asknostr

Replying to Avatar Kristaps K.

VENOM - Blac Metal - Live at Wacken Open Air 2022 https://youtu.be/4tL6C5lO7Yg #music #musicstr #tunestr #metal #metalstr #blackmetal #speedmetal #Venom #Wacken

Man, I know I'm late to the party here but sad I missed that. I listened to them all the time when I was a teenager

OVH are driving me nuts. I know Hetzner aren't crypto friendly. Can anyone recommend a good dedicated server company for low-end dedis please?

#asknostr #dedicatedserver #hosting

Planned obsolescence:

https://www.pcworld.com/article/1953639/western-digital-drives-ask-to-be-replaced-after-3-years-even-without-hardware-problems.html

Also, and this is just anecdotes, but I personally know three people who have had WD drives fail on them this year.

One of my lightning nodes is on a machine running platter drives and it serves its purpose well enough (it's not a routing node, just a wallet for bitrefill etc). I'm more comfortable with it than a raspi anyway :) but I wouldn't trust WD drives for anything important.

Can I add Western Digital platter drives to that list?