

Finally, something decent to come out of the surveillance state.


Finally, something decent to come out of the surveillance state.


I tried that, Windows FOR SOME FUCKING REASON keeps opening new holes in the firewall anyway.


I don’t even know what it does.


Why do people use PopOS? I genuinely don’t get it.


Fedora Kinoite is, probably, the best recommendation.


I’m not really interested in maximum privacy, at least right now. I’m slowly moving there though.


Debian is a stable server distro, but in the desktop space users expect everything to just work and while Fedora is usually backwards compatible, Debian isn’t always forwards compatible.
As for security updates, IDK.
I’m operating mostly of second-hand information I vaguely remember, I’m not an expert on these things so I’m not really the person to be discussing this with. There’s surely a reason Linus uses Fedora over Debian though.


I don’t see many ads, and the ads I do see are never food items. I think this canned rambutan was the first food ad I’ve seen in years.
I can’t even fathom this being a coincidence.


Except the only sites I visited where I mentioned rambutan were Duckduckgo, Startpage, and Wikipedia.


This isn’t a matter for fingerprinting. I haven’t directly visited any sites about rambutan other than Startpage, Duckduckgo, and Wikipedia.


I should’ve known that but forgot. You’re right, my ISP shouldn’t be able to see anything but that I visited Wikipedia. They wouldn’t know that I searched for rambutan.


And it also could not. Either way it wasn’t active at the time so it’s down to whether my ISP is selling it.




Firefox only stores the time of my most recent visit so I don’t have that information anymore, so let’s just assume I went to YouTube immediately afterwards.


If my exit point is my ISP, and my ISP is selling my data to advertisers (hypothetically), then a VPN would make a difference. That’s why I mentioned it.


AdGuard, ProtonPass, TamperMonkey, Time Tracker, and 10ten have those permissions. The others don’t. I don’t think any of these extensions would be able to function without these permissions.


I use AdGuard rather than uBlock Origin for adblocking, because it allows me to opt-in and only block ads when they are aggressive enough to be annoying. But I’ve not been trying to minimize fingerprinting. The issue is just that everything I used in this instance came with either a tacit or explicit promise not to track me and I don’t know which is lying.
Other extensions I use are:


I had removed all but Duckduckgo and Startpage from my browser.
My browser extensions are a good angle. If they’re selling my data to fund themselves that’d explain some things.


Apparently Startpage and Duckduckgo use contextual advertising (rather than targeted advertising) so the advertisers on an unrelated website shouldn’t know I was looking up rambutan.
I consider the wishlist to be an extension of my backlog.