Your story doesn’t drive clicks though…
Your story doesn’t drive clicks though…
Actually I don’t feel that for any instance, be they extreme right left or center.
Let the users pick for themselves, instead of forcing them into a position.
If it seems wild to you to fedrate with Metq, why don’t you just defederate yourself then?
Because you actually have that power. You yourself can decide.
If .world deferates the entire instance, people like me who wants to federate with them no longer has a choice.
Wow, a sane take!? I’m surprised that this popped up between all the anti-israel propaganda here on Lemmy.
Yadda yadda yadda… You can just block them yourself. No need to force everyone to miss out on them, just because you may think it’s wrong to federate with them.
Yes, I meant unbiased, sorry.
But look at our scores. We are voices that defies the echo chamber. Therefor we must be silenced.
It sucks, because I actually genuinely was happy for Lemmy, and had moved all my browsing over here. But alas, it seems that I can no longer use this platform for news. I will go back to having this community blocked.
PS) Try going to r/worldnews and Reddit, and check what the tone of audience is over there. Much more biased towards Israel, which is a no-brainer in my world.
Notice how the comment you replied to, despite claiming they “always get hate” has nothing but supportive people upvoting, while you have 3 angry lions going for the neck because you dare to say you support Israel…
It has come too far to ever work. This community, @world, is no longer a place for biased news. I have had to block for a long time, but just came back to see if it was still such a mess. Turns out it is.
The worst thing is that the mods here are directly supporting this.
Yes, that is a core aspect of how these “aliasing services” work.
You are able to simply hit the “reply” button, in which ever email provider the emails are routed to, and whatever you write will be delivered exactly like that to the person who sent you an email. From their perspective everything will look exactly as if they were talking to a regular email address.
This is a feature of both AnonAddy and SimpleLogin.
Regarding catch-all, that is basically also how I configured my usage of AnonAddy. Usually you would go and create a new alias, before you want to receive incoming mails on that address. All emails to aliases that are not already created will be dropped. But they also offer a, to me at least, superior version, where aliases are automatically created once the first email arrives on it.
This way you basically have a catch-all address, but with the benefits of being able to respond as all “identities”, as well as toggle off individual ones if you start receiving spam. If you read below, avoiding spam is my ultimate goal with all of this. Your use-case may be different.
I have written a small add-on for Firefox, which will automatically generate a random forename.surname@domain.com
for me, and create that alias in AnonAddy with the current URL as a note.
But yesterday I was checking in to a hotel, and the reception asked for an email, so I just typed hotel-name@domain.com
, which will clearly indicate to me that it was created for that hotel only.
The downside to this is that it’s easier to spot that it is indeed an alias address, but I’m also well aware of how spammers just buy active email-addresses in bulk, without caring about where the leaks come from, so I’m not too scared that it will stick out too much.
You shouldn’t do stuff like facebook@domain.com
or github@domain.com
though. That’s gonna stick out like a sore thumb.
Thanks? lol
You are very active in your own topic. Feels like you genuinely care.
Now let’s switch the table, shall we? Which VPN do you use?
Yes, you are correct.
If you’re using your aliasing-service to “blend in the crowd”, just like how TOR works, you may not want to use a custom domain.
For me, the purpose of AnonAddy is first, and foremost, to help me combat spam. Any privacy improving aspects I see as purely bonuses.
I will use the shared domains from time to time though, if I consider the risks to be too high. This goes from posting an email in a public forum, to signing up for a particularly suspicious newsletter for one-time benefits.
As always, you should take your own threat model in mind.
Yes, correct.
I’ve done a lot of digging, and the only concern I’ve found is that the company is somehow connected to PureVPN.
I’m not paranoid, so for me this is fine. Take your own threat model into consideration.
Funnily enough, Ivacy knows basically nothing about me, since I bought the offer through a 3rd party site. I have nothing registered on my Ivacy account, aside from my email and password.
Ivacy VPN
Got a lifetime deal for 30 bucks.
Yes, it’s very useful.
I have my own domain, which I use with a service called AnonAddy. It allows me to generate unlimited unique emails on-the-go, which I can then toggle off if spam starts coming in.
I use a unique email for every single service I sign up to.
Now, you are able to do this without a custom domain, but then you are putting all your eggs in one basket, and if the domain(s) you used for signing up, suddenly aren’t being renewed, you will lose access.
Thats why I have my own domain for this. If AnonAddy goes out of business, I can just take my domain, and all my aliases, to another service, such as SimpleLogin for example.
It seems like the negatives are always highlighted, when it comes to AI.
The obvious positives are always just disregarded.
The internet made it easy for scammers to teick people from across the globe. Internet is bad!
There can be other reasons, and while it saddens me to say, we were forced to keep IE for specific web-panels, which hadn’t been updated since the 90s.
Edge does, after all, allow for compability with such sites, which is a good thing.
Please note that this is work work-related machines only. I dont see how it’s an issue when it has to do with your work account. You shouldn’t be using this for other things than work.
Yeah, the sync can be a bit “effy” sometimes. I’ve noticed it with history and open tabs, probably affects newly-saved passwords as well.
Anyways, Lockwise worked good for me for many years, and its definitely better than nothing.
We all have to learn to improve.
2023 was the year I started my journey towards privacy as well. Protonmail and AnonAddy for email aliasing.
Doing this also made me switch to an actual password manager, instead of relying on Firefox to save my passwords.
I picked Bitwarden. Their track record seemed good. Price is also extremely fair. Its most likely a lot less than you were spending on LastPass anyways. Another notable mention is 1Password, though I have never used them myself.
Good luck!
This was me for the last 7 or so years. I still had the Lockwise app and everything.
I switched to Bitwarden half a year ago, and I’m very pleased with the transition.
I find it easier to manage with the add-on, and it allows for saving notes and attachments for each login. The built-in 2FA is godsent though. No more hacky solutions like Authy to get 2FA on my PC.
The original reason for why I switched, was because I was scared of my PC getting infected. If you store passwords in Firefox, they can be accessed from a file on the PC. If that’s not a concern for you, you can easily keep using it though.
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