Anonymous ID: 0d14ed March 3, 2022, 12:37 a.m. No.15770306   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>0309 >>0312 >>0594 >>0621 >>0665 >>0772 >>0832

>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TTb31HVYil0

QAnon Continues To Gain Believers

>80,842 views | Feb 27, 2022 | TYT

Even though Trumpโ€™s presidency has been over for a while now, the QAnon conspiracy theory movement is still gaining traction with the group increasing in size since the end of the Trump Administration. Around 41 MILLION Americans believe in the conspiracy that Satan-worshipping pedophile elites are drinking the blood of and trafficking young children. Cenk Uygur and Ana Kasparian discuss on The Young Turks.

Anonymous ID: 0d14ed March 3, 2022, 1:31 a.m. No.15770523   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>0525

What I have; you'll not go back to a polluted phone

Bought the 5a when they went on sale, 450.

>https://grapheneos.org/usage#camera

>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YuZhhL-LQOc

GrapheneOS review | 3 weeks with a DeGoogled Phone

>33,502 views | Sep 13, 2021

This video will encompass a summary of my GrapheneOS review after using it for 3 weeks. GrapheneOS is a consumer-grade open-source mobile operating system based on the Android Open Source Project, or AOSP. It's one among the many custom ROMs created on that platform. Unlike previous homemade ROMs, though, this one offers enhanced privacy and security. It improves technologies such as app sandboxing, exploit protection, and the permission model significantly.

 

Daniel Micay, the co-founder of CopperheadOS, a privacy and security-focused mobile OS, developed this relatively new mobile OS. GrapheneOS used to be known as the Android Hardening Project when it was created in late 2014. Micay and his team decided to rebrand the project in 2019 to better reflect how it has grown and matured.

 

Although GrapheneOS is based on Android, the two operating systems are not identical. One significant difference is that GrapheneOS is Google-free. That means no Google Play Store, Google Chrome, Google Maps, or any of Google's other apps and services. You might question why an operating system would keep Google out entirely when so many people rely on its services. Well, this is all part of the project's efforts to provide the most strong privacy and security possible to its customers; bringing Google and its snooping eyes into the mix would make it impossible. In essence, if you don't use Google, you won't be tracked, which means you'll have better privacy and security.

 

Apple's new on device scanning is a great reason to switch to a private mobile OS. Apple's NeuralHash works by transforming images on a user's iPhone or Mac into a unique string of letters and numbers known as a hash, which will be available in iOS 15 and macOS Monterey in the next month or two. Any time you make a minor alteration to an image, the hash is changed, which can prevent matching. According to Apple, NeuralHash aims to ensure that images that are identical and aesthetically similar โ€” such as cropped or manipulated photographs โ€” produce the same hash.

 

//CORRECTIONS:

A commenter noted that starting with iOS 14, Apple does support MAC address randomization when scanning for networks. It still uses your devices WiFi MAC address when the connection is established, but they do add a level of privacy when scanning for networks.