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No I mean much simpler. Something like NetSurf:
richwicks says
No I mean much simpler. Something like NetSurf:
I run Linux (Ubuntu) on my HP desktop (2017 model). Chromium and Firefox crash sometimes. I'll try NetSurf.
You might have to compile it.
I'm not saying NetSurf is a usable program, I doubt it is, but I'm saying browsers should be as simple as that. I wouldn't install NetSurf on my machine, but I've played with a few very simple browsers before. Some don't even support the ability to play video inline.
what I'm suggesting is contact information isn't www.patrick.net but rather something like e5725089ef32b85aa3e35d4d67c70e7f
richwicks says
what I'm suggesting is contact information isn't www.patrick.net but rather something like e5725089ef32b85aa3e35d4d67c70e7f
I had a similar idea, but something which can be remembered by a human, like 4 or five words. The average person knows about 25,000 words, so four of those gives 390625000000000000 distinct combinations. That should make a sufficiently large space of four-word names that people can remember.
I am using NetSurf now. Seems rather crude or overly simple, but it is fast and does not crash.
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People seem to INSIST on using cloud storage, which removes your ability of privacy, so I'm going to write a strong encryption program using the NaCL librarary;
https://nacl.cr.yp.to/
The goal here is that the resulting encrypted data is impossible to recover without getting the original key. Keys are changed regularly, and being able to brute force one block will give the attacker no advantage in cracking the next block.
Also, it will be computationally expensive to attempt to crack even with specialized hardware. This increases energy consumption and slows down the encryption and decryption, but also will make brute force attacks 1000's of times slower.