• 13 Posts
  • 38 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: July 30th, 2023

help-circle














  • byte1000OPtoPrivacy@lemmy.mlLockdown Mode for Android?
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    8 months ago

    That’s true, all devices are hackable, there’s no 100% protection.
    No tool is perfect, but if that’s a security improvement, it might be worth enabling.

    I know of at least one instance where lockdown mode protected a user from NSO spyware.
    A Citizen Lab’s research confirmed it:

    For a brief period, targets that had enabled iOS 16’s Lockdown Mode feature received real-time warnings when PWNYOURHOME exploitation was attempted against their devices. Although NSO Group may have later devised a workaround for this real-time warning, we have not seen PWNYOURHOME successfully used against any devices on which Lockdown Mode is enabled.

    It is encouraging to see that Apple’s Lockdown Mode notified targets of in-the-wild attacks. While any one security measure is unlikely to blunt all targeted spyware attacks, and security is a multi-faceted problem, we believe this case highlights the value of enabling this feature for high-risk users that may be targeted because of who they are or what they do.







  • All internet connections into and out of your Linux device will now be blocked unless a VPN connection to a Proton VPN server is active.

    If I understand correctly, before version 4.2.0 (that includes the Advanced setting), the kill switch wasn’t active until you opened the ProtonVPN program. So if you restarted you PC, it was connecting to the internet without going through the VPN tunnel, so your traffic was somewhat exposed.

    Now, with the new permanent kill switch, there’s no internet access without running ProtonVPN.





  • I’m glad you’ve edited you’re blog post so now the country of Qatar is mentioned, which was not the case before. At least there’s some progress here.

    But I believe that your description of the situation is currently still misleading, especially the title “Israel funded Hamas”. Again, it might just be a language issue, but It seems like your claim is that Israel took money from its own budget, and gave it to Hamas (directly or indirectly). If that’s actually you’re claim, there’s no source you’ve cited that actually says that. Is that your claim? Please correct me if I’m wrong.

    It’s hard for me to tell if you’ve actually addressed the point I was making, because all you did is adding quotations. So I don’t know if you’ve accepted my correction that it was not Israeli money nor US tax payers’ money, but in fact was Qatari money, just as your sources say.

    So to be clear, I’m not arguing about the fact that Netanyahu’s strategy was to allow Qatari money to be handed to Hamas in Gaza, for the purpose of preventing peace talks with Fatah’s Palestinian Authority. That is obviously true.

    [11] Haaretz:

    It’s important to remember that without those funds from Qatar (and Iran), Hamas would not have had the money to maintain its reign of terror, and its regime would have been dependent on restraint.

    In practice, the injection of cash (as opposed to bank deposits, which are far more accountable) from Qatar, a practice that Netanyahu supported and approved, has served to strengthen the military arm of Hamas since 2012.