not yet, maybe they'll add it?
Monero doesn't have most of these problems...
To me, the internet is a place to advertise my inventions, not look at memes.
I dont like memes, they waste brain space and time. How can I prevent the home feed from being flooded by them? I block one, and 5 more show up.
That comment is there specifically to drive engagement up with all of the people correcting me in the comments.
the goal is to prevent competition, not promote it.
For now we're going to host on residential connections, and if any ISPs ban us, we'll just find other ISPs
Its about reducing attack surface and risk by minimizing dependencies
The frontend is pure HTML and CSS, you can see what its doing with inspect element, all network requests too
Our frontend is open, its just HTML and CSS, nothing proprietary client side, which would piss him off.
To answer your questions in order:
- We have our own index, its not a shitshow of mixed results like Searx tends to be. this also means that we're not chasing breaking changes of some larger engine when they decide they dont want us, like Twitter did to Nitter, and Bing did to Searx.
- We don't know how to monetize. Ads are the only option that we know of, donations do not work at all, as proven by my previous projects.
- We've already got spam prevention and removal measures in place, but I won't discuss them.
- We don't know how to scale it since its centralized by design and the frontend and backend are tightly integrated, largely because the frontend is largely generated on the fly by the backend. Maybe host a copy for each region we're aiming to acquire users from?
- Our engine already understands 5 languages, and we hope to expand to CJK languages soon.
For anyone who asks, we will not open source, but we may offer a licensed self-hosted version for a small yearly fee (maybe $10-20).
I've open sourced everything I've made in the past, and all that's happened is someone with more money picks up my project, outcompetes me, and drives me out of business. I dont want our hard work going to waste.
You should look into getting an unlocked pixel with graphene on it
Hey its me the Matrix guy, please message me: @du:nitro.chat my old server was compromised
Please message me on Matrix, Telegram died. @du:dkwc.org OR @du:nitro.chat
I've been working hard on the privacy spreadsheet, which has been in development for over 150 hours now. Its been updated, and now includes more messaging apps and more data, with a better format. I'm still working on the sidebar issue, if anyone knows how to fix it, here's the GitHub repo: https://github.com/du82/privacyspreadsheet.com
I'm aiming to make this the most valuable resource for privacy, beyond messaging as well, but one thing at a time.
Mailing lists are for old fat unix guys. Who uses email anymore? I can't even remember the last time I opened my inbox, maybe a month ago for a 2FA code?
I'll stick with GitHub because its what I know. If you don't want to use GitHub, then you can still view the spreadsheet, just dont click the GitHub or Datasets links in the fop left.
Status got a recommendation purely because it has proven itself to be resiliant to subpoenas and the cryptography is implemented well.
Nothing is sponsored, and no matter who I work for in the future, it won't impact the results. It's open source on GitHub, and I'm looking for contributors to decentralize control of the spreadsheets.
I have worked for Status in the past, but that has not impacted the review of any apps. The spreadsheet has been reviewed thoroughly by others in the privacy space before I published it, and I encourage everyone to take a look and report any inaccuracies.
The criteria is objective on purpose. Everything on the spreadsheet can be verified for accuracy.
You're not required to contribute. I went with GH because it doesn't require creating a new account on an obscure Git provider, which would kill the chwnces of anyone contributing.
I've been working really hard to research and rank messaging apps by their privacy. The more green boxes the better.
I plan to turn PrivacySpreadsheet.com into a place for privacy data on everything from cars to video games. It's all open source too on GitHub.
Not trying to advertise, I just put a lot of time into researching all this, and I want to share it since I think others could benefit.