I loved the section on managing past data! It's very important for us to understand that those companies want more data and more accurate, up to date data. You might not have immediate results of your privacy journey, but in the long term, you'll realize how much you *haven't* shared with those companies, and it'll be absolutely worth it. Just like Nathan said, when the data becomes stale, it's less valuable than your most recent information
Is anyone interested in joining a union dedicated to protecting privacy? Only by standing united can we make a difference in this manipulated world. If we don’t stick together and stand up for our cause, we won’t stand a chance.
1. Delete what you can stale what you can, and try to limit what you give the companies as much as possible. 2. cardav over TLS to nextcloud with user data encryption is probably the closest to E2EE contact syncing. That i can think of. 3. Most of what i've seen with private voice assistant has been around home assistant, but relies on LLMs for intent processing. which if your going best privacy, requires you to self host the LLM
Siri runs on device. The hardware is end to end encrypted and runs on private cloud. The architecture is i believe open sourced and you they gave the tools to test it. And Siri only needs to go to the cloud when it can't be handled on device. Siri has the option to not send your voice commands.
End-to-End only makes a difference if you trust the other end edit: To be more specific, it doesn't help too much if the other end is untrusted; for example if the other end is a corp that spies on you, while the data may be protected in transit, you will still be spied on once it reaches the destination
Encrypt everything. That makes the folks who are reading your mail spend 10x more time on decrypting. The you can aldo speak elliptically, like "how about having lunch at the pub? to your teatotaling vegan friend who likes the place down the block from it. You may not be able to stop the machine, but you can sure pack sand in the gears.
The removal is pointless, all the data has just been flagged as delete. They're storing three copies copies anyways - if you have ever given data to a company they hold it, even though they may claim it was deleted.
@@willi1978 The logistics behind this also make sense. Why bother actually deleting, when simply flagging as 'removed' is enough. As if a company would bother going through all their backups in order to properly remove certain deletion requests. Their data teams would have their hands full with it.
Thanks for the breakdown! I have a quick question: I have a SafePal wallet with USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). How can I transfer them to Binance?
I loved the section on managing past data!
It's very important for us to understand that those companies want more data and more accurate, up to date data. You might not have immediate results of your privacy journey, but in the long term, you'll realize how much you *haven't* shared with those companies, and it'll be absolutely worth it.
Just like Nathan said, when the data becomes stale, it's less valuable than your most recent information
Is anyone interested in joining a union dedicated to protecting privacy? Only by standing united can we make a difference in this manipulated world. If we don’t stick together and stand up for our cause, we won’t stand a chance.
For speach to text, futo is awsome!
Came here to shout out futo keyboard on android. Not sure if it's available on ios.
1. Delete what you can stale what you can, and try to limit what you give the companies as much as possible.
2. cardav over TLS to nextcloud with user data encryption is probably the closest to E2EE contact syncing. That i can think of.
3. Most of what i've seen with private voice assistant has been around home assistant, but relies on LLMs for intent processing. which if your going best privacy, requires you to self host the LLM
I’ve given up on privacy. Obviously I don’t share data if I can help it, but I also give my data if I get paid (rebates, brave ads, etc)
DavX 5 is what I use to sync contacts between my Android and Apple Devices
Great topics
Siri runs on device. The hardware is end to end encrypted and runs on private cloud. The architecture is i believe open sourced and you they gave the tools to test it. And Siri only needs to go to the cloud when it can't be handled on device.
Siri has the option to not send your voice commands.
End-to-End only makes a difference if you trust the other end
edit: To be more specific, it doesn't help too much if the other end is untrusted; for example if the other end is a corp that spies on you, while the data may be protected in transit, you will still be spied on once it reaches the destination
Encrypt everything. That makes the folks who are reading your mail spend 10x more time on decrypting.
The you can aldo speak elliptically, like "how about having lunch at the pub? to your teatotaling vegan friend who likes the place down the block from it.
You may not be able to stop the machine, but you can sure pack sand in the gears.
The removal is pointless, all the data has just been flagged as delete. They're storing three copies copies anyways - if you have ever given data to a company they hold it, even though they may claim it was deleted.
the only way to know how it really works is to get a job at facebook and google and see how they deal with it. Then you could delete your own data.
@@willi1978 The logistics behind this also make sense. Why bother actually deleting, when simply flagging as 'removed' is enough. As if a company would bother going through all their backups in order to properly remove certain deletion requests. Their data teams would have their hands full with it.
Thanks for the breakdown! I have a quick question: I have a SafePal wallet with USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). How can I transfer them to Binance?
Some always cared. Even 30 years ago.
Common sense then.
Smartphone generation is clueless.