Are all of its components open source?
Ruĝa Printempo; Revolucia trankvilo…
Are all of its components open source?
Funny, the Liberals think Pro-Hamas is bad.
These Privacy Policies are likely only for their website element.io considering it mentions ‘service’.
In the app itself you can disable ‘Send analytics data’ in ‘Settings/Security & Privacy’ and it sends no data whatsoever to the Devs.
I just surveilled the network traffic of my installed Element client and observed that it makes 0 connections to ‘element.io’ or ‘matrix.org’ or any other element-affiliated websites. The only connections made were to my instance server at a different service. So there is no possible way element can log my IP address.
If you’re still skeptical of the Element Desktop App then you can alternatively:
Again, Element is open source, whether or not it makes requests to the element service to purposefully log your IP address even if you do not use the official service can be verified by just auditing the code. (Good Luck with that, or just find a previous audit report on the web)
If you’re still skeptical and want to continue using the Element Desktop app. Just block element.io and eliminate any possibilities of the app phoning home.
Vague question. I will assume you log into and use the official Element web-client instance (https://element.io/). It is safe to say it logs IP Addresses for whatever amount of time similar to any other website on Earth that you connect to which is fundamentally obvious.
To mitigate this, as in to not make Element log your IP address, you have several options:
The rest depends on how the server you connect to, handles IP address logs. Some servers may retain it forever, some may remove it in a few days or weeks. Check up on your server’s rules & regulations (incl. Privacy Policies) or contact your server administrator.
I have tried a wide number of Firefox Forks, some niche ones as well. I generally do not prefer non-ESR releases or Forks because of the added Fingerprinting Risks. But all of them had the same issue so I concluded that there was some incompatibility with my Hardware (which is quite old now) and the Gecko Engine.
Due to some specific hardware issue on my end affecting all firefox based browsers, I have to use a hardened and stripped down version of Flatpak Brave, which I did manually, as a backup browser. I used to use Ungoogled Chromium but it is not reliable. Other than that there is absolutely no reason to use Brave and I would immediately switch back to Firefox only if I get newer hardware.
As a plus point, firefox (gecko based browsers in general) are the only ones I have seen which provide the best theming flexibilities.
I appreciate the project and would follow up on its development, it looks quite interesting, however I must make a small highlight regarding the title. The writing makes it seem as if SearX is not open source and provides ads. I think some rephrasing might make it more accurate.
Ah, this game. I love to pull it out whenever I am feeling bored and dried out by my other games. It’s an amazing and low resource intensive game. So to say, I like to zip across the map at subsonic speeds more than actually playing it haha. But I still get the sniper rifle whilst doing that and practice some sick ferrari headshots.