True, I just thought it might be more useful to OP than just the PDF + all other audits are listed too.
My point is that sharing an article by an irrelevant third party spreading misinformation due commercial interest is not a good pratice.
True, I just thought it might be more useful to OP than just the PDF + all other audits are listed too.
My point is that sharing an article by an irrelevant third party spreading misinformation due commercial interest is not a good pratice.
Share the audit then, not the tomsguide article.
Audit can be easily accessed here: https://protonvpn.com/blog/no-logs-audit
Oh I’m aware of this, their is no way around this without revealing personal data :(
I think Tor with Tor Bridges (to obscure that you use Tor) is your best bet. Or using Tor over a VPN (using a VPN systemwide and then connect to Tor)
Everything else is just standard opsec, not leaking personal information and so on
Also, don’t use a E-Mail address or phone number tied to your real information, like your name or IP address. Because that is how many people got caught in the past.
You can’t use social media anonymously, it will all be pseudonymous aslong as you engage, if you consume social media passively, you can. But their have been reports that passive social media consumption is tied to negative mental health.
The article is very trustworthy, promoting VPN they have financial partnerships and calling them “best”
Security and data protection wise is GrapheneOS very superior to e/OS/, but it has the tradeoff that it doesn’t support MicroG which is less worse reimplementation of Google Play Services, while GrapheneOS only sandbox them and removes the priveleged access.


Google Captcha walled, amazing. /s
What is the source of the image?
Found it: https://digitalcourage.social/@echo_pbreyer/116176604411517279
Glad to see most Germans are against.


Your technical and legal understanding seems limited. I personally work in the IT space and am a hobbyist in legal matters, in particular data protection.
I’m pretty sure there was nothing they could’ve legally done to protect the payment information.
It’s not a “bad look” for Proton; instead, it’s just people being confronted with reality.
If you commit a crime, law enforcement will be after you, and if your operational security sucks, there will be no service that can counter that.
The Brave browser has much better blocking capabilities with the goal of offering all of the uBlock Origins features, while Cromite has an ABP integration which has weaker and less support for advanced filterlists. The default filterlists selection is also quite questionable. A blocked script can no longer track you.
Brave’s fingerprinting protection measures are technically speaking superior than Cromite, the only reason that CreepJS can’t be fooled by it all the time (I’ve done my own tests and it fails sometimes) is that it has specifically been designed to adapt to its protection mechanisms, which hasn’t been done for Cromite.
You can also harden Brave to increase its level of protection:
https://www.privacyguides.org/en/desktop-browsers/#brave
https://www.privacyguides.org/en/mobile-browsers/#recommended-brave-configuration
Don’t forget to mention that Mullvad Browser is supposed to be used with a VPN to provide full protection
Source: Direct conversation with a MB developer
Creepjs is not a valid metric for fingerprinting protection.
https://coveryourtracks.eff.org/
Is very inaccurate and misleading. It is a shame that EFF is still promoting it; I would recommend looking up the videos from Techlore and PrivacyGuides about fingerprinting; they explain it very well without any misleading or highly inaccurate information. You can find them on YouTube and PeerTube.
Regarding cleaning up your stuff, in what jurisdiction do you live in? Under the EU you can make use of your rights as seen in the GDPR. Noyb.eu is a good resource for learning how to excersise your rights as an EU citizen.
Tails is by design not made to be used with a VPN service of any kind, if you want to hide your Tor usage, use the built-in Bridges instead.
If you need further advice, feel free to contact me, I would love to point you into the right direction rather than leaving you in the dark.
TL;DR: It’s a soft fork of Ungoogled Chromium which is a soft fork of Chromium.
I assume your disability is related to grammar, since there are a lot of errors in your Readme, or you might just not be that good with English yet. Whatever the case might be, it would look more trustworthy and professional if you would fix those.
Kagi Translate or LanguageTool can help: https://translate.kagi.com/ https://languagetool.org/


If you don’t give information to Proton AG which they can be legally forced to hand over, you’re alright.
Not a good idea. The value changes rapidly.