my other account: https://hexbear.net/u/mathemachristian
Yup you’re correct, didn’t notice the search bar.
Fdroid does not guarantee the software is malware free. You still need to be able to trust the developer.
I dont know unfortunately
Simple Mobile Tools got sold and probably will go the web extension way of scammers loading it up with malware to extract private info and sell it. Delete it now.
Anger is a form of excitement.
Right but the topic was about google’s data harvesting and what I meant was that you can’t just grab any AOSP distribution if you want to minimize that, you need to pick one that replaces the parts that send data to google. LineageOS for example still phones google for quite a number of services.
As far as “easy to remove” goes, I think that’s kind of debatable if you want to do it in a way that’s sustainable long term considering the effort that goes into e.g. GrapheneOS or DivestOS.
Edit: here is a list of the kind of stuff you need to watch out for if you want to minimize the data sent to google
There still is some google stuff in there, like for example phoning google servers to check internet connectivity among other stuff.
From the Wikipedia page it looks like this is what I already do, except with a boiled egg instead of paneer. But yeah boiled spinach + tomatoes + onions is the best combo.
Spinach. Its amazing. Kale same deal. Its all in how its prepared.
I mean even with devops or sysadmin you usually want to write scripts that take care of deployment, automated tests or various housekeeping chores that are to time intensive or error prone when done manually. So it really hangs on how much of a “non-coder” you consider yourself as.
I mean scripts as in a block of code that when activated terminates on its own, they can get quite large and arbitrarily complex particularly when interacting with several different components.
The claim was within the context of AV software, not a general one.
So if I’m reading this correct the vulnerability was patched before the worm got programmed and it peaked at 2000 machines infected when it targeted apache servers running openssl, which back in 2002 was basically any encrypted website.
Don’t know how an AV would have helped there.
I would recommend giving it a try, there is doomemacs if you’re feeling like learning or spacemacs if you don’t. Both have a vi-like usage.
If stuff go in stuff must go out
Have you even tried emacs?
Play the first one its amazing, and if you are wondering what it was that was missing watch https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bgJazjz9ZsA