Separate seems smart. Interacting from Lemmy to Mastodon and vice-versa isn’t exactly the most user friendly experience, since neither platform was really built with those type of interactions in mind.
Perhaps in future it’ll be more seamless.
Separate seems smart. Interacting from Lemmy to Mastodon and vice-versa isn’t exactly the most user friendly experience, since neither platform was really built with those type of interactions in mind.
Perhaps in future it’ll be more seamless.
Why would you go back to reddit? There’s no beans there.
The thing that makes /r/NoSleep good is the authors. Would be nice if more of the authors there were aware of Lemmy and posted here too.
They are not secure, as it states when you try to DM someone:
This is the same as any other DM service on any site that isn’t end-to-end encrypted, which are the majority. Nothing sensitive should ever be shared via DM.
In the ArkenFox zip there’s a updater.bat
(Windows) or updater.sh
(Linux) script which will pull the latest user.js. I do run this periodically as FF settings will for sure evolve over time with new versions, absolutely.
You could probably schedule these with a task scheduler/cron if you wanted.
I use ArkenFox as a base for a hardened version of FF. It’s not really designed to be used verbatim as that would leave the web in a fairly unusable state, at least for most users. I use a fair few overrides because on my daily browser I want it to be able to use DRM content, be able to login to my bank, etc. For me I see it as a really solid foundation, after which I can intentionally pick and choose what functionality to enable at my own risk rather than have bad defaults thrust upon me by the browser vendor.
I personally don’t concern myself that heavily with attempting to defend my daily browser’s fingerprint. With the default ArkenFox implementation, ResistFingerprinting in FF is enabled and that’s the best you can do, but it also breaks a few things on purpose which impacts functionality. I personally have RF off and use the CanvasBlocker extension to defend against naïve fingerprinting scripts, but that’s a choice users have to make.
If I were that concerned about being fingerprinted by advanced scripts, I’d be using the Mullvad Browser or TOR. Those are really the only effective way to “blend in” to a crowd. Most any browsers people use as their one for daily use that aren’t either of those will be fingerprintable and identifiable by an adversary determined enough, so investing too much time in worrying about a daily browser’s fingerprint beyond defending against naïve scripts isn’t worth that much time investment, imo.
You’re just mad that you weren’t invited.
The Simpsons isn’t just an animated sitcom. It’s a documentary about the future: