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"Freedom of speech is being able to tell someone else something they don't want to hear." "No matter what you say, someone is going to be offended." "Once you realize that politicians are not altruistic, and that they're in politics for themselves and their own personal gain, then everything makes sense." "No one is above the law." "Have you ever met a poor politician?"

Not being defensive, just being truthful...

Folks who are comfortable with AI really don't realize the threat it poses...

It's really the same thing as "I have nothing to hide"....

Unfortunately, sticking your head in the sand hoping the problem goes away rarely works....

Is that statement meant to make the use of LLMs (and the evolution of AI) somehow acceptable and "safe"?

AI is THE MOST DANGEROUS THING man has ever invented...

Replying to Avatar L0la L33tz

We all need to be very aware that what nostr:npub1sn0wdenkukak0d9dfczzeacvhkrgz92ak56egt7vdgzn8pv2wfqqhrjdv9 is describing here is not some distant dystopian future. It's our dystopian reality.

In May, Elliptic, together with researchers from MIT and IBM, developed a dataset to identify "the shape of money laundering" on the blockchain.

This dataset attempts to predict money laundering activity that has "not yet been labeled" by distinguishing between what the dataset defines as "anomalous signatures" and Bitcoin transfers between "licit services".

Falling out of these clusters deemed normal by intelligence financed corporations already leaves you penalized. Avoid KYC services? Flagged. Can't tie your transactions to a bank account? Flagged. Frequent user of coinjoins? Flagged.

You are already being debanked because a computer program has decided that you are a money launderer – not because you did something illegal, but because your transactions are deemed abnormal – and you have no legal recourse as suspicious activity reports swear financial institutions to absolute secrecy.

It's the full on criminalization of privacy in finance. The future is here, and it's Orwellian.

https://m.primal.net/JgAW.mp4

AI is the most dangerous thing man has ever invented...

So some politician somewhere had to think this was a good idea, and then get a bunch of other politicians to agree and lobby for a new law.

And we wonder why govenment is so costly and wasteful...

Replying to Avatar Ava

Proton is awesome. This kind of notice only happens when your email is tied in with "serious crime". If you a suspected of breaking Swiss law, no business is going to jail over a $13 a month user if the the gov gives them a legally binding order to freeze the account.

It's not just Proton...even the most liberal of domain hosts will not go to jail for their users. They can provide a safe harbor for freedom of speech, free press and whistle-blower projects, but when served a legal mandate to shut down a site, they must comply. If you signed up over Tor and paid with an untraceable coin like Monero, your site may be taken down, but they will still not know who the owner is.

This is not a Proton issue. This is a government law issue.

Proton has said time and time again, when forced, they must comply with Swiss law. They have repeatedly stated publicly recovery emails and recovery phone numbers are not e2ee and can be used to identify you. They recommend setting a recovery phrase instead so they will not be able to hand over any identifying information if forced to under Swiss law.

If the OP has truly don't nothing wrong, and practiced good OPSEC, they should be fine. They should be using a free burner account (signed up and accessed only over Tor) for anything that could potentially get an account frozen.

The content of their frozen account is e2ee. If they are suspected of doing illegal stuff under Swiss law and they opted to give a backup email or phone number, paid with their debit card, or enabled the dark web monitoring service, that volunteered information can be used to associate their identify, then that's bad OPSEC.

Proton has been very vocal about this, saying they will comply with government law when forced. Don't give them any data and they will have nothing to hand over.

I agree that all-in-one services can be risky. I also know it depends on your threat model and how they are signed up for and used.

No tool can replace good OPSEC or ultimately save you from bad OPSEC, or a situation like what happened with Skiff.

I use Proton in a compartmentalized way and I recommend it to most of my clients. I use it and recommend it for business domain email as well for most people.

IMO Proton is the best service of its kind out there for most people.

Proton Drive helps people ditch Google drive. That's a huge win for privacy for most people.

Yes, you can run your own server and email but if you don't do and sustain it just right, it can make you far less secure from attack.

Extreme cases call for extreme measures. In those cases, I wouldn't advise putting any data on anyone else's servers, only communicating through SimpleX or Signal, not using any kind of social media at all, wiping the web of any trace of identity, only connecting to the internet from outside the house, never using clearnet, only using Tor, etc etc.

Without sharing my client guide here, the gist is that I recommend Proton be used in a compartmentalized way, with your "official" main front-facing account using your real name and/or personal domain "business" email for official purposes. This is a huge win over using Google for most people.

There are 15 @protonmail.com etc addresses that can be used for forwarding old email (to a pseudonym email) another for purchases, another for banking, an anonymous email with just random numbers for other purposes etc.

One can then use the unlimited simplelogin aliases (they have the ability to send mail from the alias, not just receive...unlike the current built-in proton aliases) to avoid spam/breaches.

It is best in class for these purposes.

You can then sign up with another account for just VPN, another account for your Bitcoin wallet, another account for anonymous email not associated with your identity etc.

Just make sure you sign up for the other free accounts separate from your main account OVER TOR using their onion site and make sure it's a free account.

If you try to pay for an account at sign up you will have to use a debit card initially. If you upgrade from a free account, you can use cash or Bitcoin!

Sign up over Tor on the PROTON PASS page and you don't have to give an emal.

There is an option when doing it this way (on the Proton Pass page to create a free account and they will automatically create an email for you.

Then, upgrade using Bitcoin or cash and there is no worry of "having all your eggs in one basket".

"Yes, you can run your own server and email but if you don't do and sustain it just right, it can make you far less secure from attack."

Truer words...

GM Nostr--

Saturday - going to make some homemade pizza tonight!

Yum!

(Might even be better than coffee!!)

#coffeechain

You can take any one of the many mistakes as a single event and say "yeah, maybe..."

But when you take ALL of the "mistakes" that happened, you have to at some point realize that from a mathematical probability standpoint it's impossible for them all to have occurred simultaneously.

It was intentional--plain and simple. And there's really no other conclusion that can be drawn.

You'd have to suspend all rational thought to convince yourself to accept that all these mistakes "just happened".

I find XMR interesting, yet this is the chart that gives me pause...

Monero may settle out to be a good transactional system in the future, given its privacy strengths, yet I can't envision it as a store of value.

GM Nostr!

It's FRIDAY!! πŸ˜ƒ

Accomplished a lot this week, but also looking forward to the weekend.

Gotta grab a cup of Joe though first to kickoff my Friday...

#coffeechain

I've done this a few times now (reset Alby). It's not intuitive at all, but once you figure it out, it's do-able.

Basically:

a) Recover your account (you have to request a code to your email that takes FOREVER to arrive - be patient)

b) Re-estabish access to your account

c) Go into Alby wallet, go to Nostr Settings and enter your "Nostr Private Key" (as uncomfortable as that might be)

If you don't enter your own key, then Alby creates an Alby "Master Key" and links that to your wallet--when you then sign into Nostr, that key becomes a new persona, linked to your old wallet.

Does that help?