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I worked on the XBox project.
Imagine an Internet of Snitches, each scanning whatever data they have access to for evidence of crime. Beyond the OS itself, individual phone apps could start looking for contraband. Personal computers would follow their lead. Home network file servers could pore through photos, videos and file backups for CSAM and maybe even evidence of copyright infringement. Home routers could scan any unencrypted network traffic. Your voice assistant could use machine learning to decide when yelling in a household crosses the line into abuse. Your printer could analyze the documents and photos you send it.
Your printer could analyze the documents and photos you send it.
richwicks saysI worked on the XBox project.
Fuck that device. Fuck it hard. Apple can take all my shit for all I care, new devices are set up in minutes not hours. I don't game but my kids do, it's the worst platform I've ever encountered. So convoluted and retarded to be honest. I'm no techie, but I've build mediocre websites that worked well for real estate. Xbox (currently) is not intuitive and is a shit show. Maybe it was better when you worked on it, as again I don't play video games.
I worked on the XBox project.
richwicks saysI worked on the XBox project.
That's interesting.
One fun thing about tech is that your work is often used by millions of people.
I worked on a phone (the Nextel phone) that was used by millions. And many well-known websites. Not that I did a huge part of any of them.
I wrote the AT command set parser on the Nextel phone. Not that anyone uses a modem with a phone anymore.
I also rewrote the credit card form on Craigslist which all their revenue goes through.
The EFF, a digital rights group, says it has seen public records (obtained here) that show location data broker Veraset and the District of Columbia (DC) government had struck a deal early in the Covid pandemic last year, allowing the latter full access to highly sensitive, individually identifiable GPS data, harvested from people’s mobile devices in the DC area.
Veraset made the offer and DC authorities accepted it, which was followed by half a year of updates coming from the company – that operates a proprietary database for this data, meaning that Veraset’s tools cannot be audited or scrutinized by the public – tracking hundreds of thousands of people going about their day.
November 30, 2021
Israel is using counter-terrorism phone surveillance to track Omicron carriers
The implementation could be illegal.
As soon as I have time, going to look into prepaid shit phones that don't have app capability.
I'm fucking sick of smartphones. My work seems to have endless reasons why they want me to use my personal phone. So far I've told them I don't have a data plan, but there's wifi, so sure that won't hold up forever. As soon as I have time, going to look into prepaid shit phones that don't have app capability. The internet and cellphones have become so locked down it's ridiculous.
Finding a non-smartphone that is supported by carriers is tricky. Was looking at nokia 3310, but not sure there's any carriers who support it, and will allow me to remain anonymous.
Anyone found a good privacy friendly phone yet?
My moto g5 plus is flaking out and I don't want another phone that constantly spies on me.
I'm fucking sick of smartphones. My work seems to have endless reasons why they want me to use my personal phone. So far I've told them I don't have a data plan, but there's wifi, so sure that won't hold up forever. As soon as I have time, going to look into prepaid shit phones that don't have app capability. The internet and cellphones have become so locked down it's ridiculous.
I started accumulating cheap smartphones and tablets for this reason
2FA is becoming popular, especially for those who work in tech companies, and they seem to want their employees to use their personal phones to either install the 2FA app, or to receive text messages. A 2nd dummy device can work well for this use case too.
I was looking at Ubuntu touch which can run on my Pixel.
2FA is becoming popular, especially for those who work in tech companies, and they seem to want their employees to use their personal phones to either install the 2FA app, or to receive text messages. A 2nd dummy device can work well for this use case too.
Is there any truth to a new Tesla phone coming out? It is supposed to be 100% private.
But if you use a password manager to create unique passwords of 20+ characters for every account you have, that is WAY better security than any secondary authentication.
It does nothing to prevent them from copying your password. 2FA adds strong protection against both. 2FA defends against a different category of attacks that using only a strong password cannot help with. It's a fact.
How could a person defeat that? No one else has my phone.
How will they copy my password? You're talking about a key logger? Or physically stealing my device? Neither of those would work since I copy my password from a password manager that's set to wipe it from clipboard five seconds after I copy it. My password manager password you say? I don't have one. USB key. And my laptop is encrypted. So unless they jack my laptop while I'm on it, and make sure to get my usb card, they won't have shit.
2FA, you think it's fullproof?
Any good security expert will tell you another layer of complexity, poorly implemented is actually providing a bigger attac...
I fucking guarantee your 2FA implementation will leave you exposed.
Ya, poorly implemented. I would bet BIG BUCKS that the vast majority of users of the vast majority of 2FA implementations significantly enhance security. And I bet security experts would bet with me, not against me on that.
Exploiting 2FA alone buys you nothing.
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Many others have attempted Open Source phones and failed. I hope this one works, especially since I just discovered that you cannot turn off wifi or Bluetooth on Android or iOS. "Turning it off" in the controls on those phones merely disconnects you from current access points, but leaves them on so they can spy on your location with great precision and open you up to various exploits:
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/sep/21/ios-11-apple-toggling-wifi-bluetooth-control-centre-doesnt-turn-them-off