

Although syncthing is awesome, i use rclone to fetch the latest version of the password database. With syncthing, i would worry about collisions. Maybe would be better to sync it between two devices, Android and Linux.


Although syncthing is awesome, i use rclone to fetch the latest version of the password database. With syncthing, i would worry about collisions. Maybe would be better to sync it between two devices, Android and Linux.


Yes and no. You can store them in a free cloud account, provided you have local copies; there’s a risk your access to the cloud storage could be denied. A security risk is that they could harvest these databases, and decrypt them later.
I think your best bet, if you were to use free services, is to delete old databases from the cloud. Encrypt the new databases with the updated password manager and a new master password.
No. It’s safer to install Windows and Linux/GNU on separate disks. Whatever you do, install Windows first, Linux second.


AFAF
All firefighters are Fire


127 TB of data in the env? That’s a lot


Mullvad has an option in the settings to enable their own DNS filters.


You can remove the (tracking) part in the URL after the question mark, like so https://resistmap.substack.com/p/they-took-his-gun-then-they-shot


Politicians have been exempt from chat control in all the proposals so far.
Check out Autonomi: fully decentralised internet
Your preferences can change. So, don’t worry about it. If your preference would have been different you could feel guilty about that too.