I guess I really love everyone because I’ve just always done that
Firefox loves me…
There are still lots of tracking parameters it doesn’t remove. It does not bypass redirects like
doubleclick.net/redirect?url=...
, either.I’d prefer if it worked with personal and community managed filters, like every good adblocker does now.
my big sister does this. i love her so much
and checks it still works
jeff, you are mixing love with OCD… again
?utm_source=my-crush
Screenshotting a post from another fediverse app seems a bit crazy. As an alternative, this post is available natively in lemmy, as text and from the original author (so you can reply to him if you’d like).
I can’t give a universal link to a post obviously, but if you’re on lemmy.world, it’s here: https://lemmy.world/post/11631169, and if you’re not, it’s available on the !tails@lemmon.website community.
even on the federated web, you can’t escape the screenshots
The referent of a link can be changed or deleted. A screenshot cannot.
Let’s just be thankful they actually took a screenshot and didn’t take a picture of the screen with their phone.
If you set URLCheck as a default browser and you can automate the process of making people think you love them
While fdroid is great for discovery or if you’re running without Play Services, I’m using the Play Store anyway so I’ll use that if they’re on there or if not then Obtanium to get them from the source repo.
Isn’t there some weirdness with signing apps on fdroid? A bit beyond my security knowledge when I last saw it discussed.
F-Droid compiles apps from source by itself, without blindly trusting that the APK provided by the developer actually came from the source code. After independent compilation, one of two things happen:
If the app uses reproducible builds, then F-Droid verifies that its own compiled APK matches byte-for-byte with the APK provided by the developer. If they match, F-Droid distributes the APK signed with the developer’s signing key, same as Play Store does (except Play Store doesn’t verify anything).
Otherwise, F-Droid distributes its own compiled APK signed with F-Droid’s signing key.
In either case, F-Droid guarantees that you get an app that matches the source code exactly.
None of this process should matter to you as a user, and it’s all fairly transparent from a user’s perspective. F-Droid gives you certain guarantees and internally enforces these guarantees, while Play Store does not.