Explorations in Networking and Computing
A place for discussing the new developments in IT networking technologies that strive to enhance and assure privacy, security, and autonomy online, ensuring equitable and strong universal access to information.
You can share info about Confidential Computing software and hardware like Intel SGX enclaves, HSI, attestation, HEADS BIOS, and vendors like Nitrokey, Purism, Fairphone, Open Source Hardware, etc.
The Tor Project, Nym, mixmaster, Yggdrasil, Veilid, and other networking technologies can be discussed here. Questions could be answered by people versed in any of these networking projects.
Also, social media in such networking paradigms could be discussed and be of interest to the wider Mastodon community. You might think about how Amethyst with LND and LNC works, for example. Or have thoughts about developing a social media Veilid application. Facebook has an onion address. What about new networking technologies incorporated into the Fediverse?
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No. Firefox is not the most secure browser, although it is more amenable to privacy protections. Tor browser is based on Firefox but they are moving to Rust code. Chromium based browsers are supposed to be stronger, but then you've got to de-Google it if you want the privacy controls. Brave is good for that.
Libre Wolf is a hardened version of Firefox. No browsers I know of that are commonly used sandbox, containerize, or virtualize by default (like Bromium). So, containerization is a novel and cool feature. Otherwise, you have to use firejail profiles or SELinux. But the other important aspect is shaping the privacy protections of the browser to fit with the site you are interacting with. As most people know, things won't always work on the net with all protections and security mechanisms in place. So there is a sweet spot that depends on what you are doing. That's why I think Libre Wolf offers a useful innovation with this feature.