HalimC.com

Halim's Personal Blog

A sad tale of what happens when Big Tech infiltrates and corrupts non-profit free software foundations.

Last updated: September 21, 2024

The Mozilla Foundation that produces Firefox, largely funded by advertising deals and Google, started testing a new advertising data collection feature in partnership with Meta this July.

They also bought an advertising company that claims to respect privacy. Yeah, right.

With their foundation focusing more on A.I. and the Orwellian double-speak named “privacy-focused advertising” rather than the actual Firefox web browser, I can no longer recommend Firefox as a safe alternative to Big Tech's platforms.

This leaves Brave as my primary recommended browser, even though it is also funded by advertising (which can be disabled) and is based on Google's Chromium browser engine. Users of Firefox that prefer the user interface may want to give LibreWolf a try.

Some good news on the browser front is that a new alternative browser platform called Ladybird is under development. They are funded by a non-profit foundation that only accepts unrestricted donations and doesn't sell board seats, meaning Big Tech will not be able to buy their influence, unlike other prominent foundations.

The bad news is they're still in the early development phase and don't expect to have a public semi-usable release until 2026, so stay tuned. This is something I'll be keeping an eye on.

If you'd like to contact me about ideas you have for this blog, or anything else, text me on Signal or email me. My email address is my first name @halimc.com

An article about keeping your personal data away from Big Tech's consumer platforms.

Last updated: February 9, 2024

Too long to read?

  1. Take the time to learn and understand how cloud services work before you use and trust them.
  2. If you don't have time to do that, don't trust them, and try not to use them.
  3. Get some drives to store your own data on, even if they're small. You can keep your own important data offline.

To understand the why, you need to first understand the how.

Technology is just a tool

Like a hammer, or a knife? A hammer is likely to be faster and more efficient at seriously damaging your laptop if you don't like it, or the content on it.

Some tools aren't great

Are they slow, hard to use, have poor battery life? Is it overheating? Crashing often? It might be just that it's old, but is that because the hardware itself is old and can't keep up, or some piece of the software you need to accomplish what you want to do is old?

You can replace the tools you don't like

Often times, you can solve these problems by replacing a key tool that you're using that is holding you back. That doesn't necessarily mean replacing the entire device, it could be just some of the software you're using within it.

The Evolution of Software: Understanding the Tools

Older software that older people might remember?

Back in the 1980's, you had software running almost exclusively on local computers, PCs, Macs, Apple IIs, C64s, etc. To use software on them you had acquire a physical disk and make that program and data available to your computer to access and run it.

Tip: You can still use a lot of these older programs and games for free in your web browser at https://archive.org/details/tosec.

That was the standard design. That meant you usually knew what software was actually running on your computer, and who it was from, and you knew what it was doing.

Then the internet became widely available. Companies realized they could offer internet services that made things easier for people to do things that required manual effort in the past.

What is “the cloud”?

In modern times, you are encouraged to not think about the software you are running, and just consume services, either free services or ones that you have to pay for. This isn't a bad thing, and it allows you to gain free access to tools, that are primarily just software, running on someone else's computer using your own device to access it. You need to be very careful with free tools though. Nothing is free to operate on the internet.

The Cloud is just someone else's computer system.

You are storing your data on it, and they can do whatever they want with it, even if they claim they don't, they still own your data physically.

Even if you're using free services, someone is still paying for it. You're trusting these companies with your personal data. They can do anything they want with your data, because they lie when they say they don't.

An Example Cloud Service

Almost all consumer devices today come with a cloud service that synchronizes the photos and video on your phone to their cloud. They offer you a limited amount of space in their cloud for free.

They run software on your computer, phone, tablet, Mac, etc. This software connects to their computers where another tool confirms who you are and then copies your data from your computer (phone) to their computer.

Evaluating the Service

You might be thinking “I know that's how it works, duh.” or even if you're not, that's okay too. The point is that the ease of use of these services condition you to just use them without thinking about how the multiple tools they're using to provide the services actually work.

You might switch services because another free one offers you more storage space, but you're still putting your data on someone else's computer. This might be easy and simple, but it is important to be aware of the implications of it.

YOU are the product they are selling

These “free” tools (services) often do things that are against your best interests that you don't even know they're doing. You’re using them for free because the companies that produce them are mining tremendously creepy amounts of data from you, every second you use them they use you.

Owning Your Data

In the past, the first mobile devices would typically synchronize data to your local computer via a cable. You had a private copy of that data. You could choose who and what to share with other people on the internet.

Modern consumer cloud services have flipped this paradigm. Photos and other data from your phone are automatically uploaded to “the cloud”. You're automatically giving your data to someone else's computer. Someone that you probably shouldn't trust.

In recent years, open source technology has evolved to the point where it is now easy, even for non-technical people, to host many of these common cloud services yourself, on your own computer at your home.

If it was that easy, wouldn't everyone already be doing it?

The reason more people aren't doing this already is because they don't know it is possible, let alone easy. They're also probably unaware or just don't care about the implications of sharing their data with these companies that clearly do not have their best interests in mind.

The Bare Minimum

Get Some Drives

Getting some drives to store your data on is the most important step in breaking free from the cloud. If you don't know what kind of drives you need, my quick guide on drives will get you started.

Once you have some drives, you can copy data onto them using your computer. Keep copies of important things on more than one drive.

Conclusion — The Why

If you treat technology as tools that you think about now and then, instead of just using them without thinking, you'll realize that maybe there are better tools you can use.

You want tools that don't exploit you without your knowledge. Tools that allow you to easily keep a local or even offline copy of your data. Tools that allow you to choose who you share it with.

Start small and simple, then build upon that if you want to and have the time. You can own your data and know where it is physically located.

In my next article:

How and why to make your own home server

What if you could replace all the cloud services you use with services you run at home, and store your data on your own drives, but still have it synchronized with all of your computers and mobile devices?

If you'd like to contact me about ideas you have for this blog, or anything else, text me on Signal or email me. My email address is my first name @halimc.com

A technology article that doesn't encourage you to buy anything, or do anything that will encourage you to buy anything.

Last updated: September 21, 2024

Too long to read? avoid Big Tech software and services, use signal, [use brave] or [use librewolf]

These are technology tools I'd recommend people look into using for their personal lives and even, when practical, professionally.

Unless otherwise indicated, these tools are free.

What I'd recommend you DON'T use:

Anything from Big Tech.

You are the product that these companies are selling. You're just renting access to their services in exchange for your privacy. You agreed to this in those privacy policies that would take way too much time to actually read and review with a lawyer so you could actually understand them.

My advice: Avoid Big Tech products and services as much as you realistically can. If you can't avoid them at work, that is fine, but avoid them in your personal life as much as possible.

Tools to Replace Big Tech

In 2024, there are a lot of great open source tools you can use to protect yourself from Big Tech!

Awesome Privacy is a great list of tools, curated by software developer Alicia Skyes, and a great place to start, but the list is long and could be a bit overwhelming at first.

Definitely make sure you have the essentials section covered. Things like secure password management and multi-factor authentication for anything remotely important, including your phone, email, internet, not just financial services. Phone, email and internet are often overlooked, but they can be used to breach MFA for other services so they really are essential to secure too.

I'll focus on some of the other Awesome Privacy recommendations and how I've been using them:

Texting

Signal is an easy replacement for texting on both Apple and Google devices. Even your parents or grandparents can easily figure it out if they can use a phone to text. It works the same way. You can also install it on your computer too and text people from there, just like iMessage and Google Messages, even if your phone is offline. It isn't perfect though, as it still has many issues, but it is probably the best option right now for phone number-based texting. Better than anything from Apple or Google at least. It works better than Apple or Google in mixed texts between their two platforms too.

Web Browsing

Using anything other than Chrome, Safari or Edge is a great start. This includes the built-in web browser on your phone that is programmed to make you not think about it.

I've personally been using Brave for years and still consider it to be the best privacy-respecting browser out there. Fans of Firefox, which I no longer recommend using, may want to give LibreWolf a try. It is a browser that is based on Firefox's code and includes many privacy and ad-blocking features that Firefox lacks.

Browser Extensions

I'd recommend at least installing uBlock Origin and Privacy Badger. Consider others on the Awesome Privacy list if they suit your needs.

Searching

Please don't GOOGLE IT! or encourage anyone else to. It was the go-to for everyone for a while, but hopefully that isn't the case for many people these days. I switched to DuckDuckGo for a minute, but I was DuckDuckGone when they announced they were reversing their previous stance and starting to censor search results. Censorship, and a lack of respect for privacy, go hand-in-hand ethically. The open source HuggingChat AI using Meta's Llama agrees: (https://hf.co/chat/r/s1emz4V)

I'm mostly using Brave Search now, although I'll still compare a result in Google or even Bing if I don't get the results I'm looking for, if I absolutely have to, but I've found that to be less and less necessary. For those more technically inclined, SearXNG is a privacy-respecting search engine you can host yourself. Many people offer public access to their own SearXNG servers here: https://searx.space/

It almost seems, like the browser-makers, that also operate search engines, might make it intentionally hard to change the default search engine, and they're also the ones that make the operating system that makes it also hard to change the default web browser. That couldn't be a coincidence, could it?

Social Media

This is where it gets a bit tougher, and I think it will take more time for technology in this space to evolve, and for people to become aware of alternative platforms and why they should want to use them instead of Big Tech's.

Avoid Big Tech's Social Media

Cobalt is an open source tool that you can use if someone sends you social media links for services you'd prefer not to use to view and download the audio or video friends send you without the ads and tracking of actually using those Big Tech services. Just paste their link in the box.

Alternatives to Big Tech Social Media

The Fediverse is a decentralized social network that allows anyone to join an existing community or start their own. These tools, based on a communication standard called ActivityPub, have the potential to replace Facebook and other services with a better-for-humanity alternative. Find a Fediverse community that aligns with the things you are interested in, and try it out.

The advantage of these Fediverse platforms is that they're all independently controlled, but linked together and decentralized, with no single entity in control of the entire network. You could start a private social media platform for your friends and family pretty easily.

Matrix is a chat platform similar to Discord, group text messages, or even IRC. Just like the Fediverse, anyone can run their own Matrix server, and link it to others, and you can talk to people on those other servers. There are even ongoing efforts to integrate Matrix with the Fediverse.

If you'd like to contact me about ideas you have for this blog, or anything else, text me on Signal or email me. My email address is my first name @halimc.com

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