

Slight correction: I think you’re mixing up LMDE with Peppermint OS.


Slight correction: I think you’re mixing up LMDE with Peppermint OS.
Why not just power-profiles-daemon?
LibreWolf doesn’t work to give you a non-unique fingerprint. Use Mullvad Browser for that (without changing anything other than the safety level).
Don’t use a VPN with Tails. You could try something like https://github.com/PJ-Singh-001/Cubic to roll your own custom Ubuntu ISO, or you can just install another Linux distro on it which is what I recommend. Don’t forget to enable disk encryption because you can’t reliably wipe data from flash storage.
You can use https://launcher.moe/ 's software for Hoyo games btw. The top one is the one for Genshin Impact.
Though last I installed Genshin on Linux I remember there being a slight chance of getting banned because you had to disable the anticheat to run it on Linux, but I never had it happen to me and I’m not sure if that’s still valid.
Artix really needs an archinstall like script though. Setting it up more than once is really tiring.


The person here wasn’t mad about Proton charging money. They were mad that when they signed up to the service and entrusted login information to Proton it was not a restricted feature, but now Proton has started to request money for it and they can’t get access to it again.
Not to mention this person is already a paying customer, they just don’t pay the 13 dollars Proton started requesting to store a couple bytes of data, or at the very least provide temporary access for backup.


What website do you get your VPS from?


It’s a post criticising a popular privacy-focused company. Some people in this community may want to avoid this company’s products if they know about stuff like this happening. What the fuck is the problem here exactly?


Your browser clock is not off. LibreWolf, Tor Browser, Mullvad Browser etc. set your browser’s reported timezone to GMT to not reveal which timezone you’re actually in.
And I don’t understand what you’re talking about in the last sentence.


The operating system is not the only way of spying, there is already firmware on your device running without your permission, pretty much impossible to see what code its running, and requires expert level knowledge to disable (or tamper with :)) if a third-party firmware implementation that allows disabling the IME doesn’t support your device.
Most phones today also just have a non-unlockable bootloader with a spyware Android skin installed. Locking something down to this level is not really impossible.


KDE Plasma has HDR support. You can check if your monitor is supported by booting from a cutting edge KDE distro like Fedora KDE.


It’s still there 😭


First of all: You don’t need end-to-end encryption for e-mail. Don’t choose something like Proton or Tuta just because of that (I highly recommend reading the linked reviews).
Disroot seems to be the only e-mail service which fits your criteria (though screen reader support will depend on what e-mail client you use I guess, not sure about Disroot’s webmail in this case but since it allows free accounts you can test it out for yourself.)


My main gripes with it were that its package repositories were really small and that a lot of installer shell scripts just didn’t work because they used GNU flags of coreutil commands, while Chimera Linux uses FreeBSD coreutils.
These issues can technically be “resolved” with Distrobox, but I just found the Artix Linux dinit version much more usable.
It doesn’t have any containerization between instances. There is an experimental opt-in setting for it but it’s completely broken. It’s just sandboxed because of flatpak.
It doesn’t use any seperate layers of containerization other than flatpak. So if you don’t install it via flatpak, it won’t be sandboxed.
There is also no proper instance containerization (you can enable it in Bottles’s settings, but it’s marked as experimental and I’ve been unable to run a single application with it on), so an app installed on one instance in Bottles will have access to all other instances’ files.


You can use OnionShare to host a chat instance on the Web over Tor.
You can just use Syncthing for syncing.