Nope, I’m not doing that. If they want that, they can do it themselves.
I’m 100% sure that Raspberry Pi has that. I can set how much of ram will go for the gpu. But raspberry pi’s gpu isn’t really a gpu.
They are stored behind luks and I think they are readable only by root. But bootkit can probably only infect UEFI from Linux that is running on that machine. And to interact to UEFI you probably have to be root, right?
I’ll look into more options, either store keys on a seperate luks usb key or on a hardware securety key like Nitrokey. For sbctl
there is already a roadmap feature for hardware security keys, I hope this comes soon :)
Well… if you have your own keys (like I do) you have to store them somewhere. That somewhere is probably somewhere on a computer where they are used so you can update the kernel. If you have private keys, you can probably bypass secure boot.
Is there a way to have private keys stored on a nitrokey that has to be plugged in for every kernel update?
We can switch ISP???
I always open settings on every app or website to see what I can change. This gives me feeling like this is something made just for me and I will use it for longer. Except KDE, this has way too many settings.
Yes, Tor recently made a change to that. This does increase fingerprinting but not by much. A lot of Tor users are using Linux rather than Windows.
Thats the important part ;)
Arch, you can fully customize it to your needs, and has access to AUR for more hacking tools.
I like it but it seems they have to crawl a bit more.
I use monero online and cash offline, because no one accepts monero offline.
Actually you can already run minecraft PE on linuc for quite some years, so nothing new.
Looks fantastic but how much are apps sandboxed? I don’t want WhatsApp to see all my files for example.
And blocks Tor.
Amazing…
I love things that can route internet over something that should not be used for that. For example I’m thinking of making same thing over SMS and Veloren/Minecraft (or anyother videogame)'s private chat or something.
to test if it’s Firefox’ fault
Firefox follows web standards the most, but because most people use Chromium-based browsers web developers make websites for Chrome instead for the web.
IMO it’s the best (desktop) Chromium-based browser. Which means it’s a bad browser but there are a lot of worse options.
In my country they don’t exist yet…
I know KDE is the most similar to windows but I would never install it due to 2 reasons: