pardon my blind ass, but I haven't succeeded to find where ukraine fired in russia before the war. could you kindly cite it?
dead drop? safe with a pin code in some library, that's being shared with a customer?
nostr:npub132hskmv4xl4t84dl6pmzzlzghrd5j9h9u35h8g6c7v2n7aafjl9qrpnlpx мне тут делать нечего, а хочется позаниматься моушн графикой. Хочу сделать что-то вроде рекламу под музыку. Какой Open source проект вы бы хотели увидеть в этой рекламе?
Tor — это ж базис :)
можешь и за монеро навернуть
a must-have, at least while we still live with governments & capitalism
Signal/Matrix are most widely used
Session has Tor+ built in it
SimpleX has no identity (every separate dialog with you is as with a completely new person)
Personally, I use Session.
Any proofs, pardon me, that you're in any way associated with the real anonymous? Like this account's npub mentioned in official Anonymous twitter?
nostr:npub132hskmv4xl4t84dl6pmzzlzghrd5j9h9u35h8g6c7v2n7aafjl9qrpnlpx
Кто-нибудь пробовал работать стоя? Какие ощущения? Стоит того?
а как ты на стройке посидишь-то
insert commas in your password, so when your credentials are dumped into a CSV, it breaks it
#privacy
world service organization makes country-neutral passports, and does not require birth parents / birth country permissiom, tho it requires some documents to prove your identity (a passport..). juridically accepted in every country (in practice often unlawfully not). there's also Mr. Freeman passport, which might actually not require even any documents, but I'm not sure about this one
I WEAKLY RECOMMEND these apps (first recommendations I've made yet) -
* Stagenet version of Garnet by developer retnull / retrnull, of unknown npub
* Nostrudel.ninja by nostr:npub1ye5ptcxfyyxl5vjvdjar2ua3f0hynkjzpx552mu5snj3qmx5pzjscpknpr
* Amber by nostr:npub1w4uswmv6lu9yel005l3qgheysmr7tk9uvwluddznju3nuxalevvs2d0jr5
* Nos2x by nostr:npub180cvv07tjdrrgpa0j7j7tmnyl2yr6yr7l8j4s3evf6u64th6gkwsyjh6w6
* Nos2x-fox by nostr:npub168nqgewzkamnyh53x0epqrftkv2pdh9gzr6558v4vetzr3w7uxfs63926e
Why are these WEAK recommendations?
To you, maybe all my recommendations should be weak because I am not a coder, cryptographer, or mathematician, and cannot review code for security issues at all.
To me, these reasons:
* These are all on GitHub without even backup links to the work of nostr:npub1m4ny6hjqzepn4rxknuq94c2gpqzr29ufkkw7ttcxyak7v43n6vvsajc2jl
* Garnet - using Monero for tips might break its anonymity, the bounty on a monero-based nostr client might be a deep state bounty connected to the IRS bounty for cracking Monero, it's weird that there's a Monero-based client before a dogecoin-based client. The availability of a Stagenet version at least shows self-awareness of this being experimental 🤙
* Nostrudel.ninja - I can't get discovery feeds to work, I see others report other issues, the project could sorta be considered "stretched thin" but that's also exactly what got it in my recommendations
* The others - I'm paranoid in general and none of this stuff is designed the way I would design it so it's hard for me to strongly recommend anything at this experimental prototype stage.
These aren't the only apps I would ever suggest using, or use myself, or onboard someone with, but they are the first ones I've noticed seeming more worthwhile (or less untrustworthy) than others.
nostur (iOS nostr client) unironically puts a shit-emoji (💩) after #monero and #xmr hashtags (ノಠ益ಠ)ノ彡┻━┻
it doesn't really matter, was 9/11 staged or not: we have confirmed data that US has planned identical terrorist attacks from declassified documents — check out eg. «operation Northwoods»
(p.s.s.s.s.s. just follow the science: hate terrorist governments, wear masks to protect friends from getting sick 🌚)
Monero4life, bruh. it's the main currency I'm using
but freedom is also a tool... you cannot use freedom itself (as a goal), you use it /to be free to do/ something...
chilling at the moneromarket.io
чуть не забыл
3. Enslaved (I'm going to work for pennies, because I haven't got money for education, because my parents have worked for pennies)
4. Nourished (I'm going to go to prison for being born gay)
5. Censored (I cannot really talk, that I support %badcountryname% / %badpersonname% / %etc%
6. Unhealthy (while self-cost of insulin in US is about 2-3$, the market price is 99$)
the list can be continued infinitely
Does it really matter if something as small as GIFs would be stored centralized? There's plenty of services to publish any type of GIF you can wish for (from radical right to radical left), and even if they ALL get censored, it's not like it's gonna crush our freedom of speech (we'll go back to images before we create something like your nip — still, most likely they will never get censored or down).
my personal list (ask for sources):
1. It's no secret that numbers tied to telegram accounts can be doxxed, and it costs very cheap. Moreover, since recently, Telegram specially prevents the use of fake numbers purchased on special services. Probably, this is done in order to sell anonymous numbers built into Telegram itself, which can be bought for the cryptocurrency TON, but the price is absurdly high - about 9 TON, or 19 dollars per number! Usually disposable numbers cost around 0,5$. The only left option is buying ready-made accounts, and mostly from services of Russian origin, which creates new security threats and is inconvenient.
2. The user agreement says that if you are accused of terrorism, Telegram can give the authorities the user's IP address and phone number. And while it says this has never happened before (which is probably not true), the mere fact that it's possible is enough.
3. But, while Telegram swears that it passed “exactly 0 bytes of information to the authorities,” Der Spiegel's report says otherwise: Telegram has repeatedly shared the personal information of its users/users with at least the German government.
4. Documents from developers of surveillance software for Russians, which turned up in the New York Times, reported that the FSB (russian FBI/CIA) can learn when and to whom users send data via Telegram and whether files are attached to messages.
5. End-to-end encryption is not available in chats, and is optional and inconvenient in private messages (it does not synchronize between devices).
6. Telegram client code is published in the public domain, but the server code is not. At the same time, the server part is the most important in terms of privacy.
7. Telegram is centralized. This means that, first, they can de-anonymize you, and second, they can censor you (which already has happened with *MANY*anarchist/opposition channels). Thirdly, even if they doesn't want to censor/spy on you, thanks to centralization, service still can be censored by a third party: eg. few months ago Telegram (as well as YouTube, Viber, WhatsApp, Vkontakte) started crashing a lot (the crash was explained by the inspection of special services and the adjustment of Roskomnadzor's gateways).
8. A small thing, but unpleasant: if you believe one (only) #truestory, Telegram support communicates with you without any respect
9. Telegram was created by a russian man (Durov) and that should not be forgotten. Once upon a time, the creator of Telegram, had a reputation for fighting russian censorship without fear or favor. Now, however, Durov's behavior raises huge suspicions. Back in 2020, Telegram was unblocked because Roskomnadzor “positively assesses the willingness expressed by the founder of Telegram to counter terrorism and extremism.” despite the fact that the original court requirements for Telegram, which led to its blocking, *were not met*. The unblocking of Telegram did happen just when Durov started having problems with his TON cryptocurrency and needed a large investment to keep Telegram functioning. As a result, we see the removal of the “Smart Voting” bot (biggest russian opposition bot) and the «fake» tag for the “Way Home” channel for wives of mobilized men. The aforementioned Telegram glitches have also already happened in 2024 on January 24: Andrey Suslov, Yakutia's Deputy Minister of Digital Development, attributed the malfunctions to preventive maintenance by Roskomnadzor.
11. Telegram's original promise to remain free and ad-free forever has been broken. Because telegram is not completely open source, it cannot be forced to keep that promise.
12. Recently, for the first time, telegram has begun to openly retreat from privacy in favor of commercialization, adding additional privacy features (such as the ability to comment anonymously (from the name of a closed channel), or see when other user(s)/s were online without revealing their data) only for those who have purchased a premium subscription.
13. There are absolutely idiotic vulnerabilities in Telegram: from the ability to calculate the IP-address (and using it — exact location and passport data through shady services) when making a call, to the accurate determination of the geoposition of a person who has enabled the “people nearby” function. (By the way, precise geo-positioning was once fixed, but has recently been made possible again.) If you do not set the settings correctly, it will not protect you even from threat model on the level of a schoolboy who knows programming — in other words, Telegram's settings are not set to privacy by default.
14. Recently, more and more opposition activists have reported that security services read their chats, and FSB officers quote their messages. Moreover, suspicious things have happened even in secret chats - for example, messages were marked as read, although it was known for sure that the interlocutor had not read them. Tho, this data is anecdotal
nostr:note1gxeex4cj7lzpz2t5da5qh44m0wdy3zkd0qhad2p5gl2cm7kl0jrqxeglrx

