

I’d really love to see some Blink based browser comparisons, especially Trivalent (which is supposed to be compareble to Vanadium).


I’d really love to see some Blink based browser comparisons, especially Trivalent (which is supposed to be compareble to Vanadium).


Made me chuckle. Truly a comment-of-the-month material.
Never! BSD bros are fellow comrades in arms against the corpos.
BSDs get too little love imho. They have more potential of becoming complete, usable and safe OSs than most Linux distros. Wish they would be discovered/talked about as much as Linux this past year.
html.duckduckgo.com is even better imho


Have you enabled local network discovery?


Maybe Peergos?


I just had the same experience. The amount of effort it takes to act ethically and stay away from literal stinking piles of toxic waste every time you need to use the computer for anything is insane. Most common browser - AI, search engine - AI, messaging app - AI, phone - AI, TV - AI. And I use the term “AI” quite liberally here at best meaning machine learning and at worst a LLM.
Tuta’s trancparency report vs Posteos


Unlike most other messengers, Delta Chat apps do not store any metadata about contacts or groups on servers, also not in encrypted form. Instead, all group metadata is end-to-end encrypted and stored on end-user devices, only. Servers can therefore only see:
- the sender and receiver addresses and
- the message size.
By default, the addresses are randomly generated. All other message, contact and group metadata resides in the end-to-end encrypted part of messages.
https://delta.chat/en/help#message-metadata
> Doesn’t store any metadata on servers
> Servers still see the sender and reciever and the message size
Explain how this is not contradictory.
Furthermore my original argument on protocol blocking still stands (if almost all communication platforms rely on a widely used protocol, the blocking of which is infeasble, then how is this a feature noone else besides deltachat has).
And as the FAQ brilliantly illustrates, you don’t have to block the mail protocol to inhibit deltachat users from communicating. All you have to do, is just shut down the relays which are crucial to masking your metadata.
Speaking of relays, all they do is transfer the trust. Without using relays you have to trust that normal mail servers wont’t log your activity (they do). With relays you have to trust that the relay operators won’t log your activity.
Perhaps they’ve changed, but last I checked they didn’t allow IMAP/POP3 due to “security concerns”.


Deltachat can’t be considered as private as Signal, SimpleX, Briar, Threema or Cwtch due to the fact that it’s based on the mail protocol. The mail protocol will always leak metadata (who, to whom, where and when) because it could’t function otherwise. And because we live in a world of surveillence, metadata can be oftentimes more valuable than the message itself.
Also saying that deltachat is unblockable because it is based on the mail protocol would be the same as saying that every app utilizing VOIP is unblockable because it uses the TCP/IP stack and blocking it would render the internet unusuable.
An email provider who doesn’t lock you into their ecosystem and doesn’t collaborate with law enforcement without putting up a fight.


I would advise against deleting your account. When you delete your account you also forfeit your username which can then be used to impersonate you. While I’m not sure on the exact math, it would seem logical that having a stagnant account keeps up their costs but doesn’t bring in almost anything resulting in a net loss on an account basis.


They just changed the maintainers? What in this thread does not give you confidence?
Why do NFTs make then inherently bad? AFAIK they are not trying to pivot into selling monkey pictures but rather selling prepaid phone cards to cover server costs for large communities. Why is this bad?
Aside from the absolute banger of an opening, the grungy visuals and character development? Perhaps the focus on philosphy (existentialism and gnosticism) and its genius depiction of yet another dysfunctional utopia. Also if you didn’t understand it, I’d recommend you read this essay.