That’s just FUD. “Secure Boot keys are considered compromised.”…
some are… some
Doesn’t mean it’s better to turn off all security measures and live without them.
That’s like saying a lightbulb stopped working, so now you live without electricity. :)
That’s just FUD. “Secure Boot keys are considered compromised.”…
some are… some
Doesn’t mean it’s better to turn off all security measures and live without them.
That’s like saying a lightbulb stopped working, so now you live without electricity. :)
Security tools are there for a reason. Sure, I can encrypt my Linux rootfs, but that doesn’t stop anyone from tampering with the initramfs. Secure Boot + UKI does.


Pebble app. There’s Rockwork, but outside of Ubuntu Touch it will only produce empty notifications. There’s Rockpool, that’s only for SailfishOS. There’s Amazfish, but so far it can only pair and then… nothing.


Me neither. Surely semver would be a lot simpler than having to explain it in a long blog post.


Does it stutter if you open Pavucontrol? I’ve seen a couple setups where Pipewire stutters when pipewire-pulse is used, as does Pavucontrol.
(In some setups this only happened when the volume indicator is enabled in Pavucontrol and disappeared when it was switched off.)


I will get interested if there’s mainline kernel support or at least some work on it. I don’t see the point of buying another phone that’s basically coming with a death sentence out of the box making me unable to get patches once the ancient downstream kernel is no longer maintained.


Yeah, I just spent it with a non-shady seller. If that thing isn’t fine, I’ll return it. For up to 24 months in this country. Then I’ll either get the money back, replacement or a repair. Law is there for a reason. No idea about the consumer protection law you can leverage, but I’m not worried about the offer I chose yesterday.


Just use something like ebay and you’ll find enough offers.
Make it run on a mainline kernel and I’m intrigued, otherwise I’m not. I’m no longer in the market for devices I can no longer use after a couple years. I will not buy another phone without mainline kernel support.


I run Debian Testing so I can report, and very rarely fix, bugs that I find. This way there are less bugs in Debian Stable.


Perhaps an issue with the TPM, try disabling it to see whether it boots up.


Probably, but building all that takes far more effort than adding an alias. Or many.


No, it cannot know for sure whether the first email is spam.


Ansible is my config and documentation in one.
It’s reproducible, idempotent and I don’t need anything else.
I write all code myself, that makes it even easier to read.


Can you elaborate on the benefit of using a random string for your secret/true inbox?
Something obvious like “inbox@” or “hello@” would get a lot of spam, a random string does not receive spam as spammers usually do not send anything to my random string. :)
Is it so that if it’s ever compromised you can just spin up a new random string as your new inbox, point all your aliases to the new one, and burn the old one?
I doubt it’ll ever get compromised, as I don’t use this emailadress anywhere. It’s just internal for my emailserver. I could also have it drop that all in a specific folder of my personal emailadress, but that’s how I’ve set it up. Should I ever receive spam there, I’d set up a new random string and fix my aliases to point there.
But again, highly unlikely that this should become necessary.
Same question, how do the random characters after the company name benefit you? Is it so that if you want (or need) to continue using that particular service after a data leak, then at least you can update your profile to company_name-[different set of random characters]?
No, it’s just so that I receive less spam. Imagine you use corp@example.com at a website, that gets leaked. Someone could have the idea, looking at this, that they could use this to find out where you have accounts by seeing whether emails get rejected from the mailserver or not and they could also just flood you more easily by just sending thousands of emails to every $companyname@example.com.
For a short while, I had it without, but this way I got some spam, which is solved now.


I’m pretty sure it was a general GrapheneOS room, but as said it’s been a while, so idk.
At least asking the question did not seem wrong.


I’ve once enabled a catchall in addition just to test and got spam, then I turned it off again. Seems you got lucky. Overall if you use catchall and later run into spam issues, it gets much harder to get rid of it, as you cannot turn off the catchall if you don’t even have a list of aliases to still let through.


WTF
Ltt.rs works quite well on Android. Even without a client I’d be glad to have it already, I’m ready when Thunderbird is ready.
Sure, but I still don’t understand why they decided against semantic versioning. That way people would be far less confused.