GitHub - pluja/awesome-privacy: Awesome Privacy - A curated list of services and alternatives that respect your privacy because PRIVACY MATTERS.
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Awesome Privacy - A curated list of services and alternatives that respect your privacy because PRIVACY MATTERS. - pluja/awesome-privacy

It’s worth noting that this list may not be entirely current, and you may want to conduct further research to get the most accurate and up-to-date information.

I had to make sure that Monero was brought up and sure enough it was.

@LWD@lemm.ee
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Lol Monero

Potentially helpful extra context that makes me extra suspicious when somebody evangelizes it all the time

Monero users can and have been deanonymized by the police. Monero also acts as a de-facto tumbler, meaning by using it, you’re money laundering for criminals as a matter of course.

@CedarA64@lemm.ee
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cash benefits money launderers as well. What kind of argument is this even? I guess the government should just be able to track all your transactions all the time? Reminder that the government that is in power at the time in a given country decides what is and isn’t “illegal”.

@LWD@lemm.ee
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We all have different priorities, I guess. You might be okay with aiding American money launderers, but draw the line at anything that might have touched Israel.

(PS: It didn’t. Matrixis several degrees of separation from anything Israeli, let alone any government, so you might want to edit that comment.)

@CedarA64@lemm.ee
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How does Monero particularly help American money launderers as opposed to money launderers in general? Also, very strange to go look through someone’s comment history so you can use that to make some unrelated remark…

I just did some quick research on Matrix and it is even worse than I thought LOL. It was literally developed by a company that was originally founded in Israel and suspected by two different non-allied governments of espionage for the Mossad. And that is just what I could find within a couple minutes on Wikipedia.

@GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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deleted by creator

@shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip
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The police want you to think they have managed to trace Monero, but what they have actually done is used other methods such as tracing the Bitcoin that people swapped for Monero and then back into Bitcoin almost immediately, or other such methods.

One user accidentally uploaded their home directory, which tied them to other hacks that the police already knew about.

@q5VtXnYt@infosec.pub
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Now let’s put that list on codeberg instead of github.

That’s a big list of stuff. Thanks.

Techviator
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That’s a great resource. Thanks for sharing.

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