Borderline?
There’s still DuckDuckGo, or Kagi if you are rich.
Borderline?
There’s still DuckDuckGo, or Kagi if you are rich.
PPA, or Privacy Preserving Attribution, is supposed to be a more-private alternative to cross-site tracking. Mozillas idea was: what if we could give advertisers metrics without compromising individuals privacy? Honestly, it doesn’t really impact you as a user or your privacy.
The problem is:
Sites will continue to use cross-site tracking techniques anyway.
This feature was enabled for everyone without their consent or giving them an option to choose.
You can disable it, though…
Settings > Privacy & Security > Website Advertising Preferences.
Uncheck “Allow websites to perform privacy-preserving ad measurement”
Almost like those systems were designed to be monopolistic and anti-competitive from the very beginning…
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I am right there with you on all counts. I’m on openSUSE now and happy as a clam.
My only problem with Proton is that they don’t work with native mail clients (especially mobile). I’d go with FastMail personally, but I do see the appeal of Proton.
AI is a neat toy… but that’s all it is. It’s horrible at almost every real-world application it’s been forced into, and that’s before you wander into the whole shifting minefield of ethical concerns or consider how wildly untrustworthy they are.
They are the same picture.