If they tried to close source it, someone would just fork it.
I’m Hunter Perrin. I’m a software engineer.
I wrote an email service: https://port87.com
I write free software: https://github.com/sciactive
If they tried to close source it, someone would just fork it.
Racism and cult mentality.
And we warn to turn them into glass if they fucken try it.
No Apple CarPlay. Can you even call it a car?
Sure, but it is good to know if something is wrong.
I see what you mean. Yeah, that would work.
You can just look at the status light on it that shows whether it’s recording.
They only record when they see movement, so no need to stand still. The spinning is what gets caught on the recording. Then if you can rip it off within ten seconds, all that gets recorded is your spinning.
Blink Security Cameras.
Record for 30 seconds, then can’t record for the next 10. So you miss 25% of whatever’s going on at your house. Can’t add other users, so anyone you want to give view access to your cameras, you just have to give them your password, and thus, full access. No web UI, just the mobile app. No Home Assistant integration. Subscription required.
If you want cheap encrypted storage you can run a Nephele server with encryption and something like Backblaze B2.
Maybe you have a vitamin deficiency. You can get tested at your doctor.
Yes, that’s why degloogled Android is best. It doesn’t matter if you use privacy centric apps if your OS is spying on you.
Use a temporary email.
I see a lot of people in here shitting on iOS and not Google. Stock Android is worse than iOS for privacy. Unless you’re going to run a degoogled Android, don’t bother getting rid of iOS. But degoogled Android is the best option, if you can.
It’s not completely FOSS, but I run Port87, which is quite a bit FOSS. It uses Haraka as its SMTP server, SvelteKit as its server framework, Nymph.js as its database layer, Svelte as its frontend framework, and Svelte Material UI as its UI framework.
The ones that I created and maintain are:
The base app layout is also available on GitHub.
You can try them both and see which one you like. Gnome is great, and it’s my preference, but KDE is also great.
If you’re going to turn it on, you could put some wire nuts on the ends of each of the wires to keep anything from touching them. It’s always better to be safe than sorry, especially with electricity.
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Ultimately, you can’t. Even if everything you’re doing is encrypted, they have access to the RAM that’s holding your encryption keys.