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NetSavior
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Interesado en privacidad y ciberseguridad. Graduado en Psicología. Bitcoin is the way. Noderunner. Psiconauta. Monero: 84Lhfc6khntLnKpwgGXRc7HbS7izJk76peoaL6R8e8nwckYxSw6o4uhWbTVuyPV5nfJ8tysJV3kLVKi1SDtTeCiu87m2pKw

GM Nostr 🫡

¿Algún truco para que X acepte fotos sin metadatos?

Hoy se han quedado a gusto.

Ah pues mira, no lo sabía. De todas formas no me sorprende, la app en Android deja que desear, todavía te pide que pongas el nsec para iniciar y no deja los con Amber. Por eso no sabía esa info, porque no lo uso en el móvil.

STAY NOSTR STACK SATS

Eso no es verdad, al menos en mi caso, yo he pagado el premium con Lightning.

Simplemente X. No estoy orgulloso de caer en estas trampas, pero a veces soy débil.

Es un mundo la verdad, yo he caído en esa madriguera y es increíble. Hay gente viviendo hasta 100 años sin pisar un hospital ni una farmacia, y hace cientos de años los que podían cuidarse y no los mandaban a la guerra a morir, pues más de lo mismo.

La naturaleza es sabia. 🌞🌝🌳

Me he inflado a infusiones, y en verdad la mayoría iban acompañadas de miel. Creo que va guay pero, por si sola para un resfriado que ha rozado la bronquitis, no se si suficiente. Para el tema de suavizar la garganta si que es mano de santo, aunque no se si te refieres a usarlo como preventivo.

Pero en mi opinión mejor acompañarla de un extra, según lo que se esté queriendo tratar.

Gracias por el consejo 🫂

Aquí estamos en mi sexto día de gripe automedicada con plantas medicinales. He notado mejoría día tras día, o como mínimo un cambio de síntomas.

Diría que lo que he notado más efectivo es:

- Infusión de jengibre, limón y miel. Me reducía mucho las molestias en la cabeza que me producían toser y sonarme los mocos.

- Infusión de abeto y menta. Me reducía bastante la mucosidad, o al menos facilitaba su expulsión.

- Respirar vapor de agua de tomillo. Diría que el mejor expectorante para los pulmones, inhalando unos minutos, al rato expulsas buena cantidad de mocos procedentes del pulmón.

Parecerá una tontería, pero hay gente que ya se habría tomado 18 frenadol, vete a saber cuantos ibuprofenos e igual se animan y toman amoxicilina sin receta y sin llevar a cabo los días y frecuencia de tratamiento.

El tercer día caí en la tentación de partir media pastilla de paracetamol de 1g, lo cual tampoco creo que haya hecho mucho, pero sinceridad ante todo. 🤗

No es que no crea en la medicina moderna, pero desde luego si creo en la medicina tradicional. También creo que los que abusan de las medicinas modernas se machacan el hígado metabolizado tanta movida y que acaban desarrollando tolerancias, con 70 años no les hará nada las dosis que se toman ahora.

El tiempo dirá.

"Eres responsable de tu segundo pensamiento y de tu primera acción."

Replying to Avatar Ava

I used to be an Apple girl. iPhone is generally considered more private out of the box than Google Android—if you trust Apple. This recent Siri spying debacle is a good case in point of why you may not.

GrapheneOS is more private than either, with not many tradeoffs in usability. I recommend GrapheneOS; it's best in class at what it does, but there are some inconveniences to using it. Not many, but there are some features you may miss, like facial unlock, Apple Pay, or Google Pay, and AI integration (everything is sandboxed), etc. This sandboxing treats Google like any other app and isolates it from being as invasive as it is on stock (even with turning off location data and hardening your privacy using their settings).

However, if you are still uploading all your data to Google or Apple, who scan email and photos and collect a ton of behavioral data, then GrapheneOS can do nothing about that. It protects a lot through its approach of greater privacy and security through isolation, compartmentalization, and on-device security. If you use these big tech services, then you must be diligent about what data you allow them to have access to.

Even if you host your own email, it's likely that the recipient does not, and that becomes a point of failure unless you use PGP (which is really a privacy band-aid since email was never meant to be a secure form of communication), or better yet, an E2EE messenger like SimpleX over Tor/Orbot. However, there are times when email is necessary, so you must be mindful of what data you're sending over unencrypted channels and to whom.

I only use the phone app or SMS messenger on my phone if I absolutely have to. The Snowden leaks proved that the U.S. government has been spying on its own population through backdoors to social media and through unencrypted communication channels like SMS and phone. All encryption is not created equal and some implementations have security holes.

I use Signal/Molly (hardened Signal fork) for normie conversations (kids, mom, etc.).

I use SimpleX for more sensitive matters.

I speak in person in private locations whenever possible for the most sensitive matters.

It all depends on your threat model. Your devices can be found through satellite and signals triangulation unless you keep them in a Faraday bag and never connect them to your home network—even then, if you turn them on when you're outside, you can be tracked and doxxed through behavioral data like work address, friends' addresses, frequented locations, etc.

I recommend a second device paired with good OPSEC for this, and a complete burner purchased by someone not connected with you in cash for a bug-out device. If you make the purchase, wear a privacy mask, pay in cash, buy a prepaid card (use decoy info to activate), or silent link eSIM paid with Monero over Tor using a device that has never connected to your home Internet for maximum anonymity—don't park in the parking lot (they have tag and RFID scanners that ID anyone who parks or drives through there).

You have to decide what's best for your threat model. Do you really need to be a ghost? Does your threat model in this area of your life include government or just big tech? Are you evading an abusive ex? Are you a well-known person avoiding being tracked by media and paparazzi? etc.

Privacy is always a trade-off with convenience. The more privacy you need, the less convenience you will have. In some areas of your life, you may need greater privacy, like private messaging; in others, you may want more convenience. In the end, all you can do is try to slow someone down by compartmentalizing and protecting your data with multiple encrypted layers and red herrings. That said, given the right reasons, enough time and money, and most anyone can be found.

If you want ultimate privacy, never use the Internet; never walk out of the house without a mask (due to Ring cameras and public surveillance); don't open any accounts in your name; don't own anything in your name, etc. Even then, for example, if you are in the vicinity of someone with a live mic or have to make a phone call to a company, chances are, your voice and current locale can be fingerprinted.

That said, it is possible for most people to disappear from most anyone save for gov entities for extended periods of time, but it is extraordinarily inconvenient and not having a front-facing digital identity is oftentimes more suspicious than having one, even if it is just there to reduce suspicion. I recommend Michael Bazzell's IntelTechniques books and training as a very good introduction to privacy and OSINT if you want to learn more.

Regarding OSINT: if you have a bank account or a phone number (VoIP/Jabber numbers are frequently blocked by financial services), a car in your name, a KYC account somewhere, a rental agreement, a mortgage, a driver's license, a passport, a public record, a brick and mortar business you work at or own etc. etc., then you can be found. I have tools and the skills to find most anyone just with open source, freely available to anyone data, and I know where to go if I cannot. For example, did you know there are states in the U.S. where tag registrations are considered public information, and in the states where they're not, it doesn't cost much to have a licensed PI run a tag?

There is even a new form of police scanning device that can read RFID signals from your car tag, your phone, your pet's microchip, even your library books—creating a unique fingerprint to ID you even if it's not your car. This device can scan and record all of this data from a distance while you're driving down the road.

Wifi signals can be used to map out a house, and the location of people inside it. There are so many ways that people can be IDed.

My advice is to know your threat model, and in what areas of your life you require more privacy and are willing to sacrifice convenience, learn and practice good OPSEC, and act accordingly.

#IKITAO #Privacy

Ya... Yo he estado mirando Paraguay, Bolivia y algo más, pero entiendo lo que dices. De Asia me llaman ciertas cosas, pero no se hasta que punto cuadraría su cultura con la nuestra, aunque supongo que dependerá de cada quien.