If I bought one apple for 1$ and over night the apple price doubled, I could sell my one apple for 2$ tomorrow. Ignoring taxes, that is.
sunblocker
What are the alternatives to OpenPGP that I can start using today?
It depends on what kind of threat you want to protect yourself against. VPN technology was never meant to do what most every day people are using it for these days.
A self hosted VPN will encrypt your network traffic between your device (laptop, smartphone, you name it) and your VPN server. So that cute hacker chick in the internet café can't see what websites you're browsing. But from your VPN server to the final destination, you'll have the rely on TLS (as in, HTTPS for example) which is secure but then the question is, what do you need the VPN for in the first place?
An argument can be made that websites have a harder time following your smartphone around the real world by tracking the changes of your IP address. Because the VPN server has a fixed IP address and websites will only see this one IP address when you use your VPN instead of seeing "oh, now they're using their home router's IP address after having used their mobile internet provider's IP address, so they must be home now". But then again, using this fixed IP address as the only user, websites can easily identify that it's you because nobody else uses your VPN server's IP address.
A commercial VPN service lets many different people use the commercial VPN server's IP address so there's much noise and it's hard for websites to make conclusions just based on the IP address.
But there's a catch: beyond masking your IP address no VPN service (self hosted or not) can add additional protection. There are so many more things besides your IP address that websites use to track your every move across websites and even across different devices you use. A VPN cannot protect you from cookies, fingerprinting techniques, malicious downloads, hackers, ...
So what can you take away from all this? While a VPN can be one part of your online security strategy, it alone isn't enough for privacy or security online. I'd recommend you do your own research on the topic and get a feeling for the evil things that websites and other actors can and will do to you, what data they collect and what they can learn from it. Armed with that knowledge you can evaluate what you see as the greatest risk in your situation/circumstances and protect yourself effectively using the measures you really need. Maybe you'll come to the conclusion that a VPN will help you achieve your goals, most likely you will need additional measures on top of or independent from a VPN.
Did YouTube recommend that video to you, too?
Good luck getting that $h!7 to run on my personal OpenBSD laptop 😎
The power consumption of crypto currencies is a problem. For comparison, just to have the full picture, I'd love to see how much energy Visa and MasterCard use for their servers.
Delta Chat is so underrated. You have to go in the settings to "enable" regular emails though which might be a deal breaker for people who just want to input their username and password and never touch any settings beyond that.
I'd be interested in some reliable data on the environmental damage Visa and MasterCard cause, just out of curiosity and to put crypto into perspective with "traditional" means of payment. I don't aim to downplay the dangers of crypto, I just want to know things about the "other side" as well, while we're at it.
You can use the linux command pwgen
to generate usernames. With the right arguments, it generates almost pronouncable names of random syllables.
pwgen -A01 [<length> [<amount>]]
is the general syntax. -A01
makes it so that you get all lowercase without numbers and one username per line. The <length>
parameter lets you choose how many characters your username should have and the <amount>
parameter lets you choose how many usernames it should suggest.
Example: 5 usernames with the length of 10 characters:
$ pwgen -A01 10 5
aefaegeina
avubeixaik
shienaitie
jaethuekeg
yoreivoozu
What kind of transaction are you talking about? Getting "real" money in and out of coinbase or making crypto currency transactions (as in, sending bitcoin to someone)? The thing you cited is about the former. For transactions on the blockchain (the latter case), there are also transaction fees that are most of the time a dynamic thing and not a static percentage of the amount transferred.
https://help.coinbase.com/en/coinbase/trading-and-funding/pricing-and-fees/what-are-miner-fees-and-does-coinbase-pay-them
https://river.com/learn/how-bitcoin-fees-work/