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On email privacy: can I store my own email and relay them through an email provider?

This is coming from a general perspective of wanting more privacy and seeing news of Mozilla creating an email service "which will definitely not train AI on your email". Sure Mozilla, whatever you say.

Rant aside, here's my question: is it possible to store all of your email on your own infrastructure (VPS or even NAS at home) and simply using an encrypted relay to send emails out to the public internet? My idea is that this removes the problems of keeping your IP whitelisted from the consumer, but the email provider doesn't actually hold your emails. This means your emails remain completely in your control, but you don't have to worry about not being able to send emails to other people as long as your storage backend is alive.

I don't know much about email to comment on what this would take. I think something similar is already possible with an SMTP relay from most email providers, but the problem is that my email also resides on their servers. I don't like that. I want my email to live on my servers alone.

Do you think this is possible? Does any company already do this?

Thanks

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Google To Allow Double Serving Ads.
  • I managed to install LibreWolf + uBlock on my work computer. I haven't fucked around with custom filters on that setup but power user mode is on and most 3rd party stuff is blocked. And JS is disabled by default.

    It's actually quite refreshing: pages load superfast and because most of my internet searching is technical documentation/blogs/stack overflow, not having JS running doesn't bother me 90% of the time.

  • Consumer GPUs to run LLMs
  • I don't mind multiple GPUs but my motherboard doesn't have 2+ electrically connected X16 slots. I could build a new homeserver (I've been thinking about it) but consumer platforms simply don't have the PCIE lanes for 2 actual x16 slots. I'd have to go back to Broadwell Xeons for that, which are really power hungry. Oh well, I don't think it matters considering how power hungry GPUs are now.

  • Consumer GPUs to run LLMs

    Not sure if this is the right place, if not please let me know.

    GPU prices in the US have been a horrific bloodbath with the scalpers recently. So for this discussion, let's keep it to MSRP and the lucky people who actually managed to afford those insane MSRPs + managed to actually find the GPU they wanted.

    Which GPU are you using to run what LLMs? How is the performance of the LLMs you have selected? On an average, what size of LLMs are you able to run smoothly on your GPU (7B, 14B, 20-24B etc).

    What GPU do you recommend for decent amount of VRAM vs price (MSRP)? If you're using the TOTL RX 7900XTX/4090/5090 with 24+ GB of RAM, comment below with some performance estimations too.

    My use-case: code assistants for Terraform + general shell and YAML, plain chat, some image generation. And to be able to still pay rent after spending all my savings on a GPU with a pathetic amount of VRAM (LOOKING AT BOTH OF YOU, BUT ESPECIALLY YOU NVIDIA YOU JERK). I would prefer to have GPUs for under $600 if possible, but I want to also run models like Mistral small so I suppose I don't have a choice but spend a huge sum of money.

    Thanks

    ---

    You can probably tell that I'm not very happy with the current PC consumer market but I decided to post in case we find any gems in the wild.

    35
    Torrenting without vpn for EU resident
  • Seedboxes go from €2 to €100+ a month depending on how much you will torrent and how much space you need on the box alongside other factors. My personal choices are Gigarapid and Ultra but there are others

  • Is it possible to redirect WhatsApp and Signal calls to a landline?

    I've been thinking about this for a bit but I couldn't come up with anything.

    The idea is that you have a VOIP number and some self-hosted VOIP infrastructure connected to a landline phone. WhatsApp, Signal and voice traffic from other apps would be redirected to this landline phone instead of your mobile phone.

    Is there a way to do this? How do I get started?

    Reasoning: I can now keep my phone isolated, wrapped in a thick towel and inside a solid box to prevent it from eavesdropping on me inside my own house.

    Please do not respond with messages like "you're too paranoid", it doesn't help.

    Thanks

    12
    Rooting and privacy on Android

    Hi,

    The general consensus amongst the Android community is that rooting is detrimental to privacy. In a sense, I agree with them since privilege escalation because of human error becomes a much bigger threat if the user has root access.

    Android has a big privacy problem encapsulated in one word: "baseband". Your modem and other hardware running in your device don't run FOSS firmware and are likely actively malicious towards your privacy.

    I am a Linux user, and I understand that concepts do not necessarily transfer well between the two. With that in mind:

    1. If I wanted to be absolutely certain that sensistive hardware like Camera, Microphone and Modem were truly off, would shutting them off as root hold any real significance?
      • I do not know what the equivalent of Intel ME is called in the Android space, but I doubt that a highly complex OS is running beneath general Android as we know it. I think it's just the firmware of the individual device that we need to worry about.
    2. Is it possible to replace the bootloader on some Android devices/prevent it from loading unwanted firmware?

    With Google taking Android behind closed doors, I suspect we will start seeing some suspicious snippets of code here and there with questionable purpose, but which might be missed by FOSS volunteers because of the sheer volume of work that is. I'm thinking of ways we can try to evade this blatant grab of our personal data.

    19
    AI companies should be charged percentages of their net worth for infringements

    I wrote this comment in response to another post but I thought this merited more discussion.

    > AI companies should be fined percentages of their total worth by the government(s) whose artists they are taking advantage of. Hypothetical example: Japanese government penalises OpenAI 50% of their net worth for every image which is even marginally similar to any publishing house in Japan. And they should be very lenient about taking on these cases.

    > I want OpenAI, Microsoft, Google, Facebook and IBM to get f\\\*\*d so bad they won't even dream of coming back and doing this. I don't know why the EU penalises these companies in monetary amounts. They should be putting rules like a certain percentage of your company for a certain type of wrongdoing.

    > TBH if Japan or other asian countries bleed these companies dry they will be sitting on an immense sum of money which will propel them to superpowers in their own right. It's a win-win for everyone.

    Let me know what you think.

    8
    How do I fit a network card with a physical x4 slot into an x1 slot?

    I'm looking at quad port 2.5Gbe Intel PCIe cards. These cards seem to be mostly x4 physically (usually PCIe gen 3) whilst I have a PCIe Gen4 X1 slot, which is more the theoretical bandwidth that the card can support. The card needs at the most PCIE Gen 3 X2 == PCIE Gen 4 X1 in terms of bandwidth.

    How do I fit the card into a PCIe x1 slot? Won't it lose performance if all the pins are not connected to the physical PCIe connector? Is there a PCIe x1 riser that the community likes that is somewhat affordable?

    Thanks

    39
    Why do we hate SELinux?

    This is not a troll post. I'm genuinely confused as to why SELinux gets so much of hate. I have to say, I feel that it's a fairly robust system. The times when I had issues with it, I created a custom policy in the relevant directory and things were fixed. Maybe a couple of modules here and there at the most. It took me about 15 minutes max to figure out what permissions were being blocked and copy the commands from. Red Hat's guide.

    So yeah, why do we hate SELinux?

    55
    What's with the move to MIT over AGPL for utilities?

    I would understand if Canonical want a new cow to milk, but why are developers even agreeing to this? Are they out of their minds?? Do they actually want companies to steal their code? Or is this some reverse-uno move I don't see yet? I cannot fathom any FOSS project not using the AGPL anymore. It's like they're painting their faces with "here, take my stuff and don't contribute anything back, that's totally fine"

    133
    Email client for Linux

    I have been looking for an email client on Linux after being tired of Gmail and Outlook web clients.

    I had Thunderbird installed on my system and thought I'd give it a spin. I set up POP for my email accounts and it worked fantastic... For a total of 2 hours, after which I realised that searching in Thunderbird is simply not going to work for me. I need to search by attachment name and sometimes even by text inside attachment and unfortunately Thunderbird can't do that (I think I tried an extension too but it made the UI super clunky to the point that I couldn't even understand how to navigate it anymore).

    Does Betterbird or any other email client fix this problem? I'm willing to try other options if they are FOSS.

    Thanks

    53
    How do I map the Windows key to XFCE's Whisker menu on Debian?

    Hi, I'm running Debian with XFCE. I can't seem to bind the Windows key to the "Whisker Menu". I think I'm getting the name of the applet wrong, can someone tell me what the correct name is so I can create a new binding? Thanks

    2
    Newsletter/RSS/general resource to keep up-to-date with DNS innovations?

    Hi,

    I have realised that my understanding of DNS isn't very good, and that there are many new technologies being adopted by mainstream FOSS applications which augment DNS from how we traditionally know it (DNSCrypt, DANE etc).

    I'm looking for a resource (blog, RSS feed) which talks about a lot about DNS and innovations happening in this space. If you have any recommendations, please let me know.

    My interest lies mostly in DNS tech which is being adopted by FOSS server and client applications.

    0
    InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)MA
    marauding_gibberish142 @lemmy.dbzer0.com
    Posts 11
    Comments 217