In that case Proton wouldn't be providing the data, the user would be. Proton can't provide what they don't have.
dracs
That doesn't hold up against the publicly available source code for their applications, white papers on their security and encryption, and multiple independent security reviews. And again, they are legally required to ignore US court orders. Only a Swiss court order can compel them to provide user information.
Got a source for that? Proton isn't able to access to any user emails. I believe Swiss law also makes it illegal for them to provide user information without a (Swiss) court order.
The only case I've heard of that was similar was when the Swiss court ordered them to provide all the info they had on a user. This was the last IP address they logged on from and a recovery email the user had entered. The recovery email is an optional thing the user had set up on their account. They also used this same email address to sign up for a Twitter account. They were able to get enough data from Twitter to identify the person.
This was taken at a place called Weirdoughs. It didn't survive the pandemic lockdowns unfortunately. I can't remember what the weird add-ons were for this. The weirdest thing I tried there was a lavender and eggplant milkshake. It was certainly weird, but still nice.
I feel like they're agreeing with them. Fairphone says the most sustainable phone is the one you've already got. They do good work with recycled material. But the most sustainable part is ensuring that the devices last and are supported for a long time.
Yeah, I had one of the earlier ones Yubikeys without NFC. I remember having to get a USB mini to full USB converter and plug it into that to login to things like LastPass. Thankfully I only needed to do it once for the initial login.
Yubikey and other hardware security keys now support NFC which makes the mobile support really good. A quick tap to the back of the phone and you're done.
- We get paid $70 per weekday and $105 per weekend. I think it's $140 for public holidays.
- Eh, it can be a bit annoying at times. It's pretty easy to swap with people as needed. I believe we're allowed to opt out of it too, some of the other devs have. Since we've started it we've tuned our monitoring scripts that false alarms are pretty rare.
- Any time spent on incidents is rounded up to 15m. Which can make it feel quite unworth it if you get an alert in the middle of the night. Unsurprisingly since they reduced down from an hour it's taken at least 16m to investigate any alert.
- We've got a decent number of people on rotation that I'm only on call about three weeks a year.
- Australia
I second this. Especially useful as you could be following an exact or similarly named community and not notice it's on a different instance.
Yeah, it's a nightmare how many flights have layovers in the Middle East. My partner speaks at conferences in Europe a few times a year and she frequently has to ask them to rebook the flights because she doesn't feel safe travelling through them. She's done it once and is not keen to relive the experience. It's doubly awkward as she's usually speaking on human rights and/or LGBT issues so they should be aware of the issues.
7 Billion Humans and Human Resources Machine (same developer) are probably the most kid friendly ones I've played. TIS-100 I found quite fun, but it's assembly like programming which might be a hard starting point for kids. Zachtronics also make some good games, but the ones I've played are more programming games masquerading as something else E.g. chemistry with SpaceChem.
They're still posting on Mastodon. They did say that they had finished up the story arc/backlog that had. So not as many posts around here.