tomtom

joined 3 years ago
[–] tomtom@lemmy.ml 5 points 3 years ago (3 children)

Anonymous crypto-asset wallets would also be banned under the new law – just as anonymous bank accounts already are – in an effort to make transactions using Bitcoin and other cryptos fully traceable.

The analogy between "crypto-asset wallets" and "bank accounts" is a bit infuriating.

If you have a non-anonymous bank account, you can still withdraw your funds to CASH and store that in a safe. Is the safe "already" banned?

Are they proposing to ban, say, use of Electrum style wallets? Or only banning things like monero?

[–] tomtom@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 years ago

Though you could also have E2E on XMPP, it'd just require more effort to find the appropriate plugins/settings on your part, than with Matrix.

That may be the case with some older clients, but the client I use has it enabled by default...

[–] tomtom@lemmy.ml 5 points 3 years ago (1 children)

I use Monocles Chat, a fork of blabber.im, which is a fork of Conversations.

OMEMO encryption works by default, and (for me) was a little bit more seamless than setting it up for Element.

Element has a slightly awkward "verification" process, and also the backing up of encryption keys, and verifying other devices, just tends to confuse new users (imo).

[–] tomtom@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 years ago (1 children)

i guess you could self host and let other people use it, like what gmail did

[–] tomtom@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 years ago (1 children)

There is no situation online where giving out more personal info about yourself makes your online activities more secure. None.

I guess a more difficult question is whether there is any situation online where giving out personal info makes society more secure.

[–] tomtom@lemmy.ml 7 points 3 years ago

definitely an intelligent marketing decision tho. i can imagine a lot of fans will want to support the company even nore now

[–] tomtom@lemmy.ml 5 points 3 years ago (1 children)

dont forget about invidious! the alternative open source frontend to youtube.

[–] tomtom@lemmy.ml 6 points 3 years ago

Yes I do not see why we should trust any system which forbids self-hosting, especially when alternatives exist.

[–] tomtom@lemmy.ml 3 points 3 years ago (1 children)

Federation increases censorship resistance. I do not think it necessarily decreases privacy, although having metadata strewn across multiple servers may be a risk. Still, I think the comparison with email is a bit of a strawn man argument, since it is not only the federated nature of email which makes it easy to surveil but also the fact it is unencrypted by default.

Moreover, email these days is concentrating in the hands of a small number of providers (gmail, etc).

XMPP seems a lot more distributed at this point in time.

[–] tomtom@lemmy.ml 4 points 3 years ago

the decentralized nature of XMPP is a huge plus for me.

I guess Matrix also has that, in theory, but from what I have seen the matrix.org homeserver still effectively functions as a central point to track metadata.

I guess the issue with XMPP is that people can send unencrypted messages to you, perhaps with deanonymizing information?

[–] tomtom@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 years ago

Ah your explanation clears it up. That whole conditional probability thing is in the wikipedia article, but I see now that my explanation of the haircut thing was not correct.

I guess maybe this is a better formulation:

p1 = P(not being guilty | evidence found)

vs

p2 = P(evidence found)

Prosecutor's fallacy would assert that, if p2 is small say 0.01%, then the defendent is guilty. But really the relevant probability is p1, which could be quite a bit larger than 0.01%.

Anyways let me know if you agree lol.

[–] tomtom@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 years ago

well it seems like they track the unencrypted metadata and share it with law enforcement. i wouldn't necessarily consider this breaking end to end encryption...

there is a separate issue with the "reporting" feature where the other end can voluntarily send your (decrypted) messages to facebook for content moderation. i dont think the article claimed that decrypted messages were being automatically sent...

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