By using PeerTube instead
By using PeerTube instead
Consume everything you can. Go down the rabbit hole so deep you’re afraid you’ll never come back. To start with, I suggest Monero Talk. That’s where you can start to listen to podcasts about it. And to get your first, you can go to xmrbazaar.com and click “Earn XMR”
Monero
Well, I can’t help you with the fact that you don’t have a whole lot of money to begin with, but as far as the fees and regulations and currency issues, Monero would solve that.
I donate sometimes with monero
I got the 50 from this video.
Ugh, Yes, you could. But, Cloudflare.
If you self-host, it’s better, but it’s still not great. The people would then know the IP address of your server that you were hosting it on, so you’d have to make sure it was a VPS and not done from home.
Because encryption doesn’t work for rooms over 50 people, so any room over that size is public by default. And most of the usage is the Matrix.org home server.
Accept Monero and you will get free advertisement because the Monero community very much cares about businesses that accept Monero and will drive traffic to you. Also, the Monero community is extremely aligned with privacy.
No, the only one that knows your IP is your server. So your server knows your IP because you talked to it and the server knows the recipient servers IP because that’s who you’re sending to. And the recipient knows their servers IP but doesn’t know your servers IP and doesn’t know your IP. Now you can find the recipient servers IP by doing a ping obviously and they can find your servers IP that same way but they can’t find your IP directly and you can’t find their IP directly. Now, this may change for audio calls because that uses WebRTC, but I can’t speak to that.
Privacy for me, not for the…
I’m not asking individually. I’m asking in aggregate.
No
This person gets it. If something like this is made illegal, the best way to fight it is just to ignore them. After all, they can’t lock up everybody. Then they would have no subjects to enslave. I mean tax. I mean enslave.
The answer to that is obviously going to be Monero.
Run Linux as your host operating system and run Windows in a virtualized environment such as VirtualBox. That’s how I made my transition. I was Windows only and barely started playing with Linux. Then I installed Linux entirely and put Windows on a virtual machine. And now I don’t even have the Windows virtual machine anymore.
Interesting idea, but the removal of perfect forward secrecy and Stuff like that is just a no. I have it just to play with, but nothing serious. I use SimpleX and Signal, and Matrix.
I have never had this happen to me thankfully but I absolutely go out of my way to make sure the device is unlocked before I ever lay hands on it and if it’s not for some reason I will absolutely return it because I flash lineage as soon as I get a new device. What I’ve found myself doing is buying new mid-range phones instead of used high-end devices. So I often find myself with like OnePlus Nord or Moto G or Pixel A or something like that.
Started using Linux in 2010 on a virtual machine on a Windows XP machine that was really not meant to run it and it was God awful. But I knew that it was the virtual machine not Linux itself. After that I was using my laptop for school and a Windows update completely broke it and I absolutely had to use it for the next class that I was going to in like five minutes and I had a flash drive with a live Linux environment already on it and so I just used that. However, once I was done with class that day, my first thought was why should I even go in and attempt to fix this Windows machine when Linux has been working fine for me all day. And so I just went ahead and wiped the disk and ran the installer. And I’ve been using Linux ever since. I do generally keep a Windows virtual machine around, just in case, but it’s extremely rare that I’ve ever needed to use it.