[-] danie10@lemmy.ml 0 points 6 months ago

It does seem to have innovated quite quickly. I'm still using Bitwarden as I have the paid access to biometrics etc, and it has a nice tweak also to add unique e-mails for every login, etc. But I'm interested to see where Proton Pass will be in another few months, seeing I'm already paying for their service, and maybe I can consolidate my expenses a bit. I actually got drawn into paid Proton by leaving ExpressVPN, which I needed for Netflix, and then found Proton (with one or two others) were the only one's handling Netflix's geofencing quite well. Looking at options is always good.

[-] danie10@lemmy.ml 0 points 6 months ago

Google's own one may be, and that is their right, but it is an open standard so anyone can produce their own RCS app like Samsung has done, and the same way Apple is building support into their exiting app. Nothing should stop a 3rd party developer looking at the standard, and producing an open source RCS app?

[-] danie10@lemmy.ml 0 points 6 months ago

Vulnerabilities on the client end are the only way right now for most state actors to gain access to messaging. So yes, various actors are already exploiting that as they have a lot at stake to gain access. But with others already able to exploit that, why would Proton want to do that? Their model is not about advertising or selling data, and they have 100 million paying customers as I understand it. The one's that have been spying and exploiting have been the likes of Meta's Facebook with their app present on the client device, and then trying to break Snapchat's encryption this was (this came out in March 2024). Anyone "can" but we need to also consider "why" and what business model they have.

[-] danie10@lemmy.ml 0 points 6 months ago

Yes, but as I said, as of yesterday still not implemented on mobile.

[-] danie10@lemmy.ml 0 points 6 months ago

Yes, passkeys are public private keys, so a site only ever sees your public key. Your device does the match with the private key. So in that way, no-one can hack the service site and steal your password. But your private key on your device has to stay very private, and should be synced to another device, because if you lose your private key then essentially you can't login in. If a site offers a backup "password reset via e-mail" then they have rubbish security anyway.

[-] danie10@lemmy.ml 0 points 6 months ago

I use passkeys for some sites, but have been reluctant to go all in until I'm sure all my devices can support them. I'm not always going to have my desktop with me, and likewise my phone's battery can be flat, etc. I've always wanted passkeys to first sync across all my devices, and ideally to be exportable and brought into a different service. Right now you can export your 900+ passwords, and import them into a different service if you want to move. You can't do that with Apple or Google passkeys.

[-] danie10@lemmy.ml 0 points 8 months ago

Well I don't use Apple anymore but yours is a trollish comment unless you at least link to why it is a scam app. At least then educate everyone as to why it is now a scam app. Is there something that has exposed this in a report. Let's at least learn something here then from you.

[-] danie10@lemmy.ml 0 points 9 months ago

I've been using the Proton Mail Bridge for a while, which allows Betterbird and Thunderbird (amongst others) to securely work with Proton Mail.

[-] danie10@lemmy.ml 0 points 1 year ago

My morning always starts with a mixed bowl of:

  • Diced paypaya
  • Diced seedless grapes
  • Slices of banana
  • 3 or 4 heaped tablespoons double-cream plain youghurt
  • Cocoa powder to flavour
  • Some powdered almond nuts
[-] danie10@lemmy.ml 0 points 1 year ago

And I forgot about those one-liner replies with something semi controversial, without any sort of backing. In the few places where I've managed my own community groups, I made it a rule that you can disagree, but then have to back it up with some reference. That made it super easy to get rid of trolls, and supported better debate as it forced people to fact-check a bit.

[-] danie10@lemmy.ml 0 points 1 year ago

Eggs are pretty nutritious actually (as long as not too many, like many other things) and yes they contain some cholesterol, but a body with zero cholesterol is a dead body. The brain needs cholesterol to survive. It's all about moderation, as the dieticians love to say.

[-] danie10@lemmy.ml 0 points 1 year ago

Thanks have added Gajim as I use it, but put link to other clients as there are many XMPP apps.

view more: ‹ prev next ›

danie10

joined 3 years ago