And if they allow rescue contacts in case you lose the password and you can decrypt the data through their account, there is a chance they also keep a key for themselves, just in case.
If you got sensitive data, learn to encrypt it yourself. That is the ONLY way to make sure. If you trust another company to do the encryption at rest for you, that is your own fault.
The irony is that over the last decades we have come up with languages that try to remove the ambiguity. Some close to English, some not. The very specific "this is what I want you to do" languages. Almost like they are...describing the program you want to create. Might even wanna call them a programming language :D
True. But for example a home server I absolutely love the simplicity. I have 6 Lenovo 720q machines, one of them as a data storage just running simple NFS for quick daily backups before it pushes them to a NAS.
One problem in this are bad actors. German Telecom for example (t-online.de) only accepts mails from servers it whitelists.
To get whitelisted you have to apply with them and your domain HAS to have a website with an Impressum, your clear legal name AND an email that is NOT your domain for emergency contact. It is insane. If every provider would act like that, email would die in a month.
Even as horrible as the current state of that already is, there is a difference between letting AI pick the next video in line or having the next video be DONE by AI
A good approach would be that usage means you gotta offer storage or bandwidth in some way. Very very difficult to implement, but say for a PeerTube: wanna watch it? Offer a small percentage of storage for storing chunks. Be a part of the system you use. Of course, the more services you use, the more resources you give up. Or you subscribe.
Don't get me wrong, this might likely be a fantastic tool. But something as essential as a secure connection would definitely need a good pair of eyes for audit before I'd use that for anything in production.
But it's a good start. Props to exploring that kind of space that needs improvement but is difficult to get a foothold in.
I am so sorry that I missed this submission a few days ago. This looks really interesting.
I’ll give this a shot. My current CL project is in literate style though, so I’ll have to see how that works out for me, but this looks really interesting.
If you got sensitive data, learn to encrypt it yourself. That is the ONLY way to make sure. If you trust another company to do the encryption at rest for you, that is your own fault.
edit: s/passport/password, damn my phone.
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