I'd be interested to hear what you think a made up job is
Supernova1051
So I upgraded and tested not adding a trusted proxy (using Traefik in front of Jellyfin) and nothing broke. Was it supposed to break or is it just that its insecure? Am I less secure by not adding it as a trusted proxy?
everyone does their own thing, but semantic versioning is specifically:
- Major: Incompatible changes (breaks existing code).
- Minor: New, compatible features.
- Patch: Bug fixes, small improvements.
it's only gotten better. now you can run it in your browser and play local files
yeah, well, fuck that guy
didn't even know tab groups were coming. interested to try them out!
to add even more to what's already been said, even if Signal's infrastructure was compromised and they could see messages traveling through their servers, each one is encrypted, the keys are rotated with every message (cracking one, which is nearly impossible, doesn't give you access to previous or future messages), and thanks to Sealed Sender, only the recipient knows who a message came from. There are many other layers that they've engineered to ensure they can't know anything about you, like private contact discovery, using secure enclaves, remote attestation, etc.
MLS only deals with encryption and key management, which is great but that's been a "solved" problem since TextSecure (now Signal) introduced the TextSecure Protocol (now the Signal Protocol) in 2013.
What I'm aware is missing with RCS / MLS compared to Signal (someone with more recent knowledge please correct me):
- Sealed sender so only the recipient knows who sent the message.
- Not storing metadata or logs.
- No built in crash reports.
- Private contact discovery.
- Published government requests providing evidence that they don't have any data.
- Open source client.
- Looking at the Google Play store, Google's Messenger shares precise location data with third parties, Signal doesn't.
- Also on the Google Play store, Google's Messenger app list a lot of data collected. Signal only lists phone number.
RCS still leaks metadata like a sieve. Encryption, considering the platforms that exist today (Signal and SimpleX), should not be the minimum requirement. Plain-text messaging should not even be possible in modern secure messaging platforms. The platform should be open source and be engineered to mitigate the collection of metadata - like Signal and SimpleX.
Signal is a publicly available app that provides encrypted communications, but it can be hacked.
This is misleading statement that will only confuse people who want to use a secure messenger.
To clear things up with anyone who's not technically inclined: Anything can be theoretically hacked. Signal has not been hacked and has no history of being compromised.
The Signal "hacks" that linked people's Signal client to devices that aren't theirs were sophisticated phishing/spoofing attacks. The equivalent of getting someone to click a malicious link via email because it looked like the real thing.
A reminder that you still need to do your due diligence even when using a secure service. Technology alone cannot completely protect you.
I love hearing good news 🥰
the web page needs to have "open graph meta tags". if the website doesn't have them, Signal won't generate previews.