I miss those old images that would show you your IP address and ISP name, which were generated dynamically based on the request. They were designed just to be a bit frightening. But, because they were rendered on the server side, there was definitely nothing stopping them from recording your IP address too.
LWD
https://help.kagi.com/kagi/company/
Read about Kagi's origin story and The Age of Pagerank is Over blog post, which serves as our manifesto.
https://blog.kagi.com/age-pagerank-over
Previously posted at kagi.ai on a page titled "Our Manifesto"
Kagi doesn't just add optional AI features, they are an AI-first company that wants to turn search into an AI agent. They wrote a manifesto about it.
Maybe manifestos aren't worth much anymore, what's with Mozilla abandoning theirs, but I tend to believe a company when they tell me what they are.
You can always sign up for the default matrix server and try it out there.
Personally, I think the video and screen sharing runs slow and janky, but it might be the closest thing to Teams or Slack especially if everyone is on the same network.
The nice thing about Fennec is you don't have to accept a Mozilla license to use it, and those Mozilla services are (AFAIK) disabled by default. In fact, when I look at their settings menu, there is no "data collection" section to speak of.
The not-so-nice thing about Fennec is a little while back, it just didn't receive any updates. For something like a month.
Just about every browser that's based on Firefox is going to be slower to update than mainline Firefox, with perhaps the exception of Tor and Mullvad because they work hand in hand.
As far as I know, there are zero parents who signed a counter petition.
I've never heard of this organization before, but a quick look at their page demonstrates they aren't just some American or European exceptionalist group. Which is good, because privacy and authoritarianism are two diametrically opposed ideologies that cut across nationality.
It's long been departed from the Firefox codebase.
My ponderings did end up being pointless, though: it turns out they never even supported MV2 Firefox extensions.
I wonder how this will effect Pale Moon.
If I were you, I would just shutter everything about the account except for the Minecraft license. Especially because, if you create a new account to play Minecraft, Microsoft is eventually going to ask you to provide identifying information like a phone number anyway. (At least, this has been my experience.)
I don't think there's the best answer here, but that's what I would do.
You might find this interesting. As I understand it, quantum computers aren't a threat to encryption yet, but cryptographers are already searching for solutions to potential impending issues.
https://csrc.nist.gov/projects/post-quantum-cryptography/post-quantum-cryptography-standardization
Pebble was from a time when enshittifiaction wasn't as terrible as it is today, and died (post acquisition) before it could really be implemented in its products. Eric Migicovsky is an odd duck in that regard. Between this and Beeper, privacy has always been "not great, not malicious (yet)", and before enshittifiaction could set in under his watch, the company gets bought out by a bigger one with a truly lousy CEO.
Under his watch. Heh.
Pebble was possibly one of the last great tech innovations before AI, in its desperate attempt to sell our stolen data back to us in a thoroughly butchered format. Which means it pains me to read
Personal home labs might be able to go much further with this, I hope.
Considering how popular this product originally was with hackers and open source enthusiasts, I really hope the hardware has as much longevity as its predecessor. And considering that was closed source and got so much mileage, I have the feeling that this will be better simply by how open-source works.