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  3. Cozy.io as a replacement for Proton Drive?

Cozy.io as a replacement for Proton Drive?

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  • internetcitizen2@lemmy.worldI [email protected]

    If the US wants your info they’ll just beat your ass half to death with a rubber hose.

    Your statement here and every follow up suggest you are asking people to not encrypt. I am saying its worth doing regardless as you impose your own compliance on unreasonable searches.

    coldmoon@sh.itjust.worksC This user is from outside of this forum
    coldmoon@sh.itjust.worksC This user is from outside of this forum
    [email protected]
    wrote on last edited by
    #21

    You don’t understand what I’m saying at all.

    You need to understand your exposure, and who your adversary is. Is it big corps? Hackers? Oppressive governments? NSAs?

    What I’m saying is if you’re trying to hide stuff from the last two, you shouldn’t have anything encryptable that they can get to. Keeping that information digitally and not clandestinely is not good.

    If you’re trying to not get tracked online by Google that’s an entirely different approach.

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    • zdhzm2pgp@lemmy.mlZ [email protected]

      Joan Westenberg mentioned this in her "Trump-proof tech stack" post; anyone have any experience with this? It says it's open source, self-hostable, and based in France.

      Unfortunate Andy Yen comments aside, a big plus is that cozy actually has a Linux desktop client (!), unlike Proton.

      G This user is from outside of this forum
      G This user is from outside of this forum
      [email protected]
      wrote on last edited by
      #22

      If you don't want to host your own data, take a look at TarSnap

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