After Trump's decree: fight for US funding for Tor, F-Droid and Let's Encrypt(heise.de)
heise.de
After Trump's decree: fight for US funding for Tor, F-Droid and Let's Encrypt
https://www.heise.de/en/news/After-Trump-s-decree-fight-for-US-funding-for-Tor-F-Droid-and-Let-s-Encrypt-10328335.html
4 comments
Open source, in search of a viable business model.
Classic, since days of MIT license lore.
Looks like universities and research labs (corporate, private, and government, wait, scratch that last one a bit) will be picking up the tiny slacks, ... again.
Classic, since days of MIT license lore.
Looks like universities and research labs (corporate, private, and government, wait, scratch that last one a bit) will be picking up the tiny slacks, ... again.
It seems more like "privacy, in search of a viable business model" (or possibly "security").
If Let's Encrypt starts charging for a certificate, how many web sites will switch to http-only?
If Let's Encrypt starts charging for a certificate, how many web sites will switch to http-only?
Yeah.
While not privacy-related, that http-only would break my own model of banning all things Chrome via a certain combo of TLSv3.1 crypto, regardless of UserAgent string.
https://egbert.net
As a working example.
While not privacy-related, that http-only would break my own model of banning all things Chrome via a certain combo of TLSv3.1 crypto, regardless of UserAgent string.
https://egbert.net
As a working example.
And to the person currently typing "was the US ever a free society?" freedoms within a society exist along a spectrum from authoritarianism to anarchy (to oversimplify) and yes, the US was at one point free enough within the context of this conversation, and is no longer free enough, even if one concedes that it was never perfectly free.