On Sat, Jul 18, 2015 at 10:07 AM, rysiek <rysiek@hackerspace.pl> wrote:
Dnia wtorek, 14 lipca 2015 02:45:39 Shelley pisze:
On July 14, 2015 2:11:35 AM stef <s@ctrlc.hu> wrote:
On Mon, Jul 13, 2015 at 10:07:57PM -0400, grarpamp wrote:
https://plus.google.com/communities/109624826715876091211 Encryption Rights - Protecting Our Rights to Strongly Encrypt By Lauren Weinstein http://www.vortex.com/lauren
but wtf in the middle of the kraakens tentacles? wth do people still trust google? even laura. wtf? the mind boggles.
I'm glad it's not just me! That was my reaction too but I held back from commenting, because I feel like I'm always bitching here about cpunks or anyone interested in privacy still using google for any reason. I don't understand it.
+1 here.
I'm an admin for a lot of groups. Those groups are run on Yahoo, Google, as well as some that are run on private mailman machines. The question keeps coming up... what is the alternative?
Well, I understand the need for more "social" (for want of better word) communication platform than e-mail. For me, this is Twister: http://twister.net.co/
This looks very interesting. Thank you, i will have to look into it. But, back to the question: How/where can someone run a simple (ignoring the sign-up required by Yahoo/Google/etc.), public, free (both ways, because paying would require identification) forum, allowing for anonymous posts (but not allowing it to be overrun by trolls), that has a simple searchable (and findable - as in searched by Google, Yahoo, etc.) archive? You still have to trust a privately run forum. Trust, as in, will it be censored, altered, still there after the volunteer gets tired of it, etc.? In other words, if you want a private discussion group about Privacy, then yes, keep it small and secret... somehow. But if you want a public discussion, what are the alternatives to Google/Yahoo/etc.? -- eden