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URnetwork

URnetwork

@yo_ur_network

Say goodbye to your VPN! https://t.co/SFkneZ7LwA

California, USA Katılım Mayıs 2024
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URnetwork
URnetwork@yo_ur_network·
Solana Mobile is building the decentralized infrastructure of the future. That’s why we’re giving Saga & Seeker holders 2x earnings on URnetwork. Free VPN + Earn = actual utility. GM to innovation. Claim your multiplier → ur.io/seeker
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URnetwork
URnetwork@yo_ur_network·
@DLuthi32TW It's likely blocked protocols on the network. We're working on a fix for that. Otherwise please email support@ur.io
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🇨🇭 CaptainDaniel 🇹🇼
Probably one of the worst apps on my Seeker is @yo_ur_network. Pretty much every time I connect with it using my Seed Vault Wallet, using the Community Edition, I have very little or no connection 95% of the time, since I've downloaded it. Any thoughts, solutions? @yo_ur_network
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URnetwork
URnetwork@yo_ur_network·
Nobody should have to choose between privacy and safety online. We're building an internet that's free, anonymous, and secure by default... not by trust. URnetwork
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URnetwork
URnetwork@yo_ur_network·
Using @cherrydotfun as a way to read our reviews and feedback from Seeker users has been incredibly helpful. Huge thank you to the Cherry Dot Fun Team!
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URnetwork
URnetwork@yo_ur_network·
Shout out to @RobTheAIguy for shouting out @yo_ur_network in his latest video. Go check out "Do THIS to STOP Claude CoWork & OpenClaw from Leaking your Data" on his YT channel today!
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URnetwork
URnetwork@yo_ur_network·
One of the top dApps on @solanamobile 5,694 Reviews Come join the movement; take back URinternet
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vitalik.eth
vitalik.eth@VitalikButerin·
This is a good post on the impact of surveillance in Iran: myprivacy.blog/the-digital-ir… It's worth reading. IMO one mistake that freedom advocates often make is that we talk about privacy violation and surveillance as "dystopian", using the word as a semantic stop sign: we know it means "bad", we nod along, and don't really go further to clarify why it's bad. I worry that this approach is long-run unhealthy: when we criticize various companies and countries for being "dystopian" and stop there, then to someone who's not already in the same memeplex, it sounds like we're basically criticizing companies and countries for not complying with our culture's aesthetic preferences. Which is ... duh, companies and countries are *supposed* to not comply with each other's aesthetic preferences, that's the whole point of the "pluralism" thing. What the above article makes clear so well is that "dystopian" surveillance is not bad because it's "dystopian", it's bad because it makes a concrete property of the world worse: the power balance between individual and state. Surveillance enables an outcome where basically everyone other than police and security forces has no opportunity whatsoever to challenge the political status quo without being punished. This means an outcome where a political regime can remain in power forever, without satisfying more than a very small coalition of people who have the eyes and the guns (now drones). The Dictator's Handbook talks about "large coalition" and "small coalition" governments; large coalition governments are the ones that are more pro-human, because they, well, have to keep a large coalition happy. Small coalition ones are the really nasty ones. Here is the near-term dark outcome of dictatorship + automated warfare + surveillance: a regime can literally survive with a coalition of size 1, because an army of all-seeing eyes and robots can defeat the entire populace in battle if needed. In Iran, we see what *just* dictatorship with surveillance can do, once you add automated police, you get to the unholy trifecta. I don't know of a good solution to this. Privacy technology, as well as more work on censorship-resistant internet (I think we should strive for at least basic-quality internet, eg. 1 Mbps, being a global human right outside the domain of nation-state sovereignty), can help somewhat to reduce the possibility of total government control. But what else? --- BTW one implicit frame in the article I take some issue with is framing Iran + Russia + China as the unique antagonists (both in surveillance they do internally, and in the technology they export to other countries). They do a lot of dystopian shit of both types. However, Israeli and US tech companies, and undoubtedly tech companies from other Western nations, also do a lot of dystopian shit. Perhaps one key difference between the surveillance described above, and the Western type, is: * The surveillance in the above article is about exercising *great control over a medium area*: you can see everything, but it requires active participation of the government of the territory being surveilled. * The Israeli / US / Western flavor is about exercising *medium control over a great area*: there are more limits to how much they can do, but their surveillance is global: they know what people are doing even in countries and territories they have no presence in. The distinction is not absolute: Israeli surveillance backstops a lot of its human rights abuse in Palestine, US surveillance reinforces ICE abuses (see the recent article about Homeland Security demanding social media firms reveal names of anti-ICE protesters), etc, and "transnational repression" is done by anti-Western countries. But *on average*, the above seems to be the pattern. The two are differently scary. The former for the reasons I described above. The latter because it allows global projection of power: a politician or civil servant in one country now has to worry about being blackmailed, droned or otherwise attacked from other countries. The USA has shown willingness to go after individual EU officials, ICC officials (see recent articles on both), and others. Ultimately, I suspect that even democratic governments will want more privacy to protect themselves, and we will have to have deep conversations about what "democratic accountability" means: how can a civil servant be accountable to the people, but not accountable to foreign spooks? My high-level frame is: privacy generally helps whoever is weaker. "Weaker" does not mean "moral": sometimes the weaker side is criminal. But in the 21st century, we are at serious risk of stronger factions using modern technologies to establish unbreakable lock-in to power. And so on average, reducing the gradient of power, giving the weak a fighting chance, is something that the world desperately needs.
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URnetwork
URnetwork@yo_ur_network·
Privacy season is here. @yrschrade kicked the door open. We've been on the other side building. Your VPN should protect everyone on the network — not just you. That's @URnetwork.
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Yannik Schrade
Yannik Schrade@yrschrade·
We need more alternative mobile hardware manufacturers if we want to reclaim personal privacy. @solanamobile is doing amazing efforts on this front. Phones should be open source.
Solana@solana

"Solana has their own phone because you literally store your money on there now. Your money is digital, on a blockchain. A competitive market is emerging for who's building the most secure phone" - @yrschrade talking privacy on the @TuckerCarlson show

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URnetwork@yo_ur_network·
Our Chrome Extension is live! Available today on your favorite chrome based browser. Running it on @brave today!
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URnetwork@yo_ur_network·
Wanted to try out URnetwork? We're live on @AppSumo for the next 60 days selling 10TB codes for $29 (no expiration date) Give us a go!
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