New to Lemmy. A privacy advocate. Interested in number theory.

  • 48 Posts
  • 308 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: July 17th, 2023

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  • Try not to take things too personally. Tails devs explicitly said they were making it for regular people (activists, journalists, domestic violence victims, etc.) and mainly not for advanced users. So by design it’s a normie-friendly OS (a user is not even expected to know how to use pgp); as such, one might generally assume its users may not be “geeks”. Nothing personal there.

    While asking questions and exchanging ideas are wonderful, one can also enjoy the freedom to study (one of the four essential freedoms), guessing, narrowing down a problem by trial and error. An attempt at solving the problem on one’s own is often of great value, a great way to learn, even if it’s unsuccessful; after that, one might be able to ask an even better question, which could be helpful for more people too. Either way, I think that most Monero users can happily agree with each other that we want a better version of bisq :) (Sorry if this comment is uncalled for.)

    Maybe this is why no one ever posts here.

    Imho (quite) a few users ditched monero.town when they had started blocking Tor.


  • A form of “DDoS protection” where every possibly suspicious connection is blocked permanently/indiscriminately is considered harmful both for the website itself and online freedom. I stopped using monero.town when it started blocking everyone on Tor after DDoSed via some stupid Tor abusers in 2024. In general we need DDoS protection, but it was unexpected and ironic to see that all-too-familiar “you are blocked because you’re a privacy-oriented user” screen from Cloud-something here on a monero-related website.

    Today I happened to notice that they have unblocked Tor (don’t know since when) and the website still exists though perhaps being less active than it used to be.

    “Sorry, you have been blocked You are unable to access monero.town”



  • Generally, votes are overrated. Especially if you’re not mainstream, by definition most people won’t support you, won’t agree with you, won’t understand you.

    Some things may be downvoted because they’re too stupid. But occasionally, you might be downvoted simply because you’re a bit too early. Like, if you’d said “being gay is not crime” or something 50 years ago, you might have got downvoted… Just a thought.










  • Maybe you can check this yourself now: a power user like someone who is already a mod got some additional menu items in “More…” under each post, which includes “Appoint as moderator”. So basically, they can appoint a random poster as a mod if they want to.

    A similar thing has happened to me and I too was wondered when, why and from where this status came 😕
    but practically it’s mostly like just an honorary title. So far the only time when being a mod ever actually mattered was, when someone cross-posted an ad massively and several users sent reports, saying it was spam and should be removed. Such a problem is very rare in a small community so maybe you don’t need to worry about it… It simply means, someone somehow judged, reasonably or otherwise, that you were a trustworthy user.
    Technically, if you’d like to, you can use your new power to appoint another mod so you may not be alone :)


  • Saki@monero.towntoMonero@monero.townMonero Gift Printable
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    1 year ago

    The concept may be lovely, but the fact is, many people nowadays have been Pavlov’ed to immediately ignore anything weird that says, “Congratulations! You got some money. Visit this URL and input something.” As they say, the Cake is a lie…

    Monero could be a wonderful gift to a friend of yours if they’re especially interested in privacy (in that case, you might want to talk to them privately, and perhaps recommend a better wallet). Otherwise, it may be kind of like casting pearls before swine…











  • Trocador shows it explicitly whether a specific CEX is no-log or requiting IP logging, which you can choose. This new thing doesn’t have TOS nor Privacy Policy to begin with. Yet as long as you use onion, logging by the front-end is rather irrelevant.

    Even if the front-end is not logging anything (which no one can verify), a CEX behind it surely records the tx and retains it as required by laws (some of them might be less than perfectly legal and might not record anything, though that would mean a different kind of risk). Using a CEX is more or less risky, be it Trocador or something else. Some may think that an instant swap by CEX is convenient. Personally I prefer DEX, even though it may be less convenient, even though Monero.town itself has an official affiliate link to Trocador too.


  • Asia might potentially be a better idea (not Japan or Korea though)

    You mean, like Hong Kong, or India, maybe? What do you mean by “not Japan or Korea though”? I’d feel China would be worse. Privacy-focused services tend to be pricey anyway, both in Europe and in the US, and the price comparison is tricky as EUR/USD can move weirdly. If you’re talking about Njalla (Sweden), it’s indeed rather expensive.

    Although France seems to be generally anti-cryptography, of course you wouldn’t go to jail just because you use Tails. There was this notorious incident related to French activists & Proton, though. Also, the Netherlands can be scary. They arrested a developer of Tornado Cash, right? Although, those things have nothing to do with VPS!