

Sure, it would also benefit it if the French state weren’t going after a civilian project… I will grant it’s a lot, but how would YOU react to a G7 member state going after you with a smear campaign?


Sure, it would also benefit it if the French state weren’t going after a civilian project… I will grant it’s a lot, but how would YOU react to a G7 member state going after you with a smear campaign?


Then why present this as recent concern about the project if it’s a personality trait going back years and unrelated to the French smear campaign I suspect you are financed by?


He is literally claiming that the French police and state are behind this campaign against Graphene, and I believe him knowing how the French are, but believe what you want…


OR, France is an evil, genocidal, ethnostate full of pedophiles, so we should maybe apply our Israel-tinted glasses and presume France to be the villain until we have concrete proof otherwise rather than blaming the victim.
The assertion was literally “Mainstream Linux is less secure than macOS…”
Packet sniffers have nothing to do with OS or firewall, so I don’t know what packet sniffers have to do with this. Can you name an arguably “mainstream” distro where it is the case that X is open by default?
Are you aware of an IRL exploitable CVE for even marginally up to date-ish Ubuntu or Fedora without user installed non-default services, exploitable by cold hitting a random port like a windows 98 worm? Maybe I’m just massively misinformed, but I don’t believe such a thing has existed since the Debian bad randoms meltdown of the 2000’s, but even that would require sshd running, which afaik Fedora and Ubuntu don’t have on a default install unless the user turns it on, so despite the Starbucks wifi happening to have a 1337 h4x0r utilizing perfect AI capable of finding all CVEs and chaining them he isn’t getting in on a closed port on ANY modern unix.
Yes. And what would be open, much less exploitable, on a default install of a major distro at all, much less on the timeframe on which one would normally be on public wifi?
Ubuntu, Mint, and Fedora all ship with default firewalls and that’s probably 80+% of laptop users. I’m also skeptical that there would even be a specific danger from taking an unfirewalled box that’s just running a browser and Steam on public wifi in 2025, which would presumably be most n00b use cases.
Mainstream Linux is NOT less secure than MacOS, and if you’ve ever seen how buggy non-Graphene Android is, tell me this OS is doing secure memory management with a straight face…
I’ve gotten pretty skeptical about the real advantages of NAS for home use. You could get any number of low cost PCs used or new and just jack in some external drives, and you’d be surprised… LVM allows for multivolume “drives” these days, and while I can’t speak to longterm robustness, it is SO much cheaper than a NAS with internal drives, and your network is probably no faster than USB2… In terms of privacy, they’re almost certainly hashing every file you send/receive, if not everything it stores, and possibly nmapping your network for marketing research like how Roombas phone home with your house layout.