• @einlander
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    727 hours ago

    Don’t forget with the Recall feature, you may be on Linux and are using a secure communication application, but if who you are talking to is on windows your conversation can be scraped.

    • Hellfire103
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      436 hours ago

      Same thing with email. It’s all well and good if you’re using ProtonMail or Tuta or Posteo, but you’re still cooked if the other side is using Gmail.

      Old problems, new modi operandi.

      • @Lumisal
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        12 hours ago

        You can send self destructing messages with Protonmail

      • @[email protected]
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        156 hours ago

        Afaik, with proton you can send messages that won’t open through gmail if you protect them with a password. The other person receives a message with a link to open the mail in a browser after entering the password. It’s not the easiest solution but if you want to avoid gmail from knowing the contents of a message, you can do that.

        • @einlander
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          125 hours ago

          But windows recall scrapes your screen, so even that wouldn’t work.

          • @[email protected]
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            64 hours ago

            “But they are stored locally! Certainly, Microsoft won’t have access to those, right? Right???”

    • @[email protected]
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      166 hours ago

      It’s not like companies that use Linux don’t get breached either. Your personal data is in thousands of databases that have varying levels of security. Personal choices don’t affect any of that, regulations like GDPR are what’s needed.

      • @[email protected]
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        5 hours ago

        GDPR has much the same problem: it can only actually be enforced against entities with a presence in Europe. When Europeans do international business, the GDPR only protects them if that foreign site has a business presence within Europe. When they have no bank accounts or business assets inside the EU, they are not subject to the GDPR.

        Even though the GDPR covers your side, it doesn’t always cover the other side.

        • @[email protected]
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          4 hours ago

          That’s why I said “regulations like the GDPR”. The US and other blocs need similar regulations. Especially the US is important, as they’ve shown that they’re willing to stretch the size of their jurisdiction to sometimes absurd lengths.

          That’s usually a bad thing, but in this case that might be good.