Bilbo
Très bonne idée, surpris qu’il n’y ait jamais eu une dépêche ni même un journal à propos de Lemmy sur LinuxFR. Juste un détail, je grouperais les paragraphes kbin et applications mobiles, ça traite des mêmes sujets : l’interface utilisateur.
En tout cas, j’en profite pour te remercier : c’est la découverte de j’ai.lu qui m’a poussé a créer un compte Lemmy.
Ça colle quand même pas mal avec cette carte des infrastrucures, trouvée sur le site de l’institut Paris Région
J’ai lu “Promised Neverland”. Quelqu’un de mon entourage a emprunté les 5 premiers tomes par hasard, j’ai enchaîné les tomes comme quand j’avais 12 ans et que je découvrais la BD “adulte”[1].
Ce manga est une putain de claque. D’habitude je vois les ficelles scénaristiques arriver à 12 km, là l’histoire est originale, glauque à souhait, pleine de rebondissements cohérents et de bonnes idées. Le dessin fourmille de petits détails. En plus c’est pas trop long pour un manga, 20 tomes.
[1] à opposer à BD dont les enfants sont la cible, pas (forcément) celle réservée au moins de 18 ans.
J’avoue…
Moi c’était celui-là. J’avais envie de demander “mais t’avoue quoi ?” à chaque fois que je l’entendais 😋
Thanks!
I used Liftoff but I missed Infinity since I moved to Lemmy, didn’t want to use IzzyOnDroid.
Any plan on a build in the official F-Droid repo?
Because of the disclaimer on this page:
DISCLAIMER: I have not thoroughly checked the .apk files available here. As stated above, they are directly taken from the repositories of their resp. developers. Some basic measures are taken, though (see the Security section below). Still, use this repo at your own risk: I will take no responsibility whatsoever for any damages which might occur as result (not saying there will be any, though). Further note the inclusion policy of this repo (see the link above) is slightly less strict than F-Droid’s.
I started typing a very long response explaining my risk model, how a malware on my mobile device will be a nightmare to my whole digital life, etc. Long story short, my case might differ from yours and I consider Izzy’s security not enough for me.
I consider myself fairly educated in infosec. Security is layered, no single measure can give you assurance it will not fail.
I suspect Google to perform automated reverse engineering on the Play store apps. F-Droid get the source, not the binaries. Much easier to look for sketchy behaviour if you’ve got the sources. Yes, Google sometimes get malware on the Play store, but it usually does not stay very long or affects a lot of their users.
Izzy simply does not have the resources to do so, so they use VT as a “replacement”, which is not good enough for me; AV solutions have traditionally shitty engines for mobile apps.
Also, Izzy is a much more confidential source for apps. Only a few (if any) security researchers will look at it. Even if someone finds a malware, I strongly doubt it will make news, even in IT security websites. Whereas the Play store or even F-droid…
I don’t blame them nor anyone using them, I’m just saying the risk of potential malware on my phone is not worth the benefit of installing bleeding edge apps for me.
The main benefit of Tailscale are:
- It solves the key distribution problem. If you have multiple Wireguard hosts in a mesh infrastructure, it can be tricky to change or remove a key quickly and consistently. No benefit if it’s only a single tunnel between 2 hosts.
- It provides STUN/DERP services to connect hosts behind firewalls or NAT, without opening ports or redirections.
Tailscale also provides more advanced services or configuration helpers, such a file sharing (in alpha), ACLs…