I'm still in the world and character building phase. Sketching landscapes, rooms and such, writing little short stories to form the characters (my idea is that they have a "memory", don't know if it works in the end).
As for now I'm completely analog, I bought a nice notebook and do everything in it. But when time comes I think I will go with Obsidian as I already use it for my other notes/projects. I think it will be very powerful with the graph-view regarding relationships etc.
Obsidian is not FOSS though, and there are alternatives. I just hadn't the time to look at them.
Edit: Obsidian can be used for free when you do not use their sync features. I use it that way and just have it in a Git-Repo for accessing it on different devices. Obsidian notes are in Markdown so you also do not have some kind of vendor lock, it's just about the links between the notes.
This feature is (in my opinion) very bad when you think a bit longer about it.
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You add a dangerous single point of compromise to your accounts. When your Proton account is compromised, the attacker will have access to all other accounts that you have linked, without resetting the password as they can login with the credentials they just gained.
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I agree with the others here, do NOT have everything in the same basket. I know it is very convenient to have everything in one place but one thing why Google is such a pain is the monopoly and the vendor lock (you can call it ecosystem but lets be real, it is a vendor that locks you into the products). This also comes back to my first point, single point of compromise.
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Yes Proton is build for privacy, even is now switching to be a foundation with solid share holder rules etc. but we do not know where Proton will be in 10 years (it is like with governments, do not give them the tools to control you just because they are nice now, they can change). If Proton would change into a more data collection company/foundation they would have access to many more data points. All webpages/services you linked your proton account with, track pixels etc.
Let's beat Google by being more respectful to users privacy and not by just copying them, let's be better!
- Biden's NSA nominee defends collecting data on foreigners and Americans alike
The Biden administration's nominee to lead the National Security Agency (NSA) says he will champion the mass surveillance power that has been used to collect data from foreigners and Americans alike and which has come under renewed scrutiny from lawmakers.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.ch/post/113885
Lieutenant General Timothy D. Haugh is very clear on section 702: > "In my experience it is absolutely essential," he told lawmakers.
New York Times on Section 702: https://www.nytimes.com/article/warrantless-surveillance-section-702.html
A very "good" designed power point of section 702 by the US government: https://www.dni.gov/files/icotr/Section702-Basics-Infographic.pdf
The law text and section 702 (page 4), I had to search way too long to get to that, mostly you just find an overview by a three letter agency to justify the section. It is like the government does not want that you read it in full: https://www.congress.gov/110/plaws/publ261/PLAW-110publ261.pdf
- Facebook turns over mother and daughter’s chat history to police resulting in abortion charges
Unencrypted chat history is a prime target for police
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/1874733
> A 17-year-old from Nebraska and her mother are facing criminal charges including performing an illegal abortion and concealing a dead body after police obtained the pair’s private chat history from Facebook, court documents published by Motherboard show.
- Meta's Rush to Topple Twitter Sets Up Looming Privacy Debate
cross-posted from: https://feddit.ch/post/91950
Meta is one of the biggest privacy offenders,, not suprising that they already seem to break EU privacy law.
Some section sof the article:
>Upcoming data privacy regulations are preventing Meta's new microblogging app "Threads" from launching in European Union (EU) markets. Experts say this is only the beginning of the privacy battle facing te Twitter clone.
> Judging by its entry in the Apple app store, it's no wonder that Threads is being shielded from EU scrutiny. Browsing history, geolocations, health and financial information, and much more are all up for grabs. There's even a dedicated category for "sensitive information" which, according to Apple's documentation, includes "racial or ethnic data, sexual orientation, pregnancy or childbirth information, disability, religious or philosophical beliefs, trade union membership, political opinion, genetic information, or biometric data."
- EU lawmakers warn UK of end to data sharing agreement
EU citizens' info could be at risk over new rules
cross-posted from: https://feddit.ch/post/88668
> I'm still reading into it but this seems to be another step of the UK-Gov to further attack the privacy of their citizens and to circumvent EU privacy laws. > > Short section of the article: > >It would authorize the UK government to issue political directions to the UK data protection body, the Information Commissioner’s Office, the groups say. And it would enable the sharing of European personal data to other countries with reduced protections. > > And as it seems (not suprising), the UK already has applied to the APEC-Framework Cross-Border data transfer: > >The UK, the groups observe, has already applied to join the US-backed Cross-Border Privacy Rules Declaration, which allows international data transfers under the arguably weak Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Privacy Framework. > > > Bill Law text: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/data-protection-and-digital-information-bill-impact-assessments/data-protection-and-digital-information-no-2-bill-european-convention-on-human-rights-memorandum#summary-of-the-bill > > Open letter against this bill: https://peoplevsbig.tech/open-letter-to-the-eu-commission-regarding-uk-s-data-bill > > Edit: > - Added EU to the country tag because it also concerns EU citizens. > - Added the APEC section >
Welcome to the world of Linux!
Yes, every modern operating system today can run Git and SSH. You simply have to install Git (if not already installed by the OS) and you are ready to go.
Git Documentation for Linux-Installation
To install git you can use the package manager for your distro, for VanillaOS it is apx
and for Fedora it is dnf
, those are used in the Terminal maybe you will also find Git inside your GUI-Package manager.
Vanilla OS is based of Ubuntu, so you should have no problem finding a working release, when you find no Git-Installation via apx
try the apt
one.
SSH will already be installed and configured, it is a default functionality.
If you have any questions regarding the installation or Git-Use, just make an other comment.
A place to have no fear of asking dumb questions
I switched to Linux a few years ago and I remember how scary it was. No one in my surroundings used Linux back then, therefore I was on my own. I had lots of questions and had to use try and error, more error in the beginning I have to say.
Let's help new comers to the world of Linux to have an easy start, to then dive into the wonderful rabbit hole that FOSS is.