APPS & TOOLS to improve LINUX PRIVACY & SECURITY

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  • Опубликовано: 17 дек 2024

Комментарии • 247

  • @TheLinuxEXP
    @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад +18

    Get 100$ credit for your own Linux and gaming server: www.linode.com/linuxexperiment

    • @JohnVietta
      @JohnVietta 4 месяца назад

      I used to use Linode for just about everything, but when Akamai bought them and doubled the prices, it made me finally bite the bullet and build a system for colocation.

  • @jhonyortiz5
    @jhonyortiz5 Год назад +75

    Librewolf does more than just changing your default search engine. They change the config files. Canvas resizing for example changes the size of your screen. Really needed if you have a screen with a resolution that's not common. I'm not sure but I think they also report that you are on windows by default. Anyways, those are all things that Firefox can do because librewolf is just Firefox but it would take forever to make those edits.

  • @justinb3195
    @justinb3195 Год назад +118

    I feel like as a community, we need to talk more about tools like Selinux. I know it's not the sexiest thing to talk about but there is a lot of power and extensibility. I think the part that keeps most folks away is the learning curve.

    • @DrewTNaylor
      @DrewTNaylor Год назад

      @i2Sage SELinux is "Security Enhanced Linux". I don't know much about it aside from it being good for security, but from a quick glance at the results of the iOS "Look Up" feature's Wikipedia result, it does appear to be similar (but a little different I think), if not perhaps more powerful due to being able to be fine-grained.

    • @MrGamelover23
      @MrGamelover23 Год назад +14

      It's probably the fact that Linux arguably has no real security model to speak of. It doesn't need one, because nobody's making viruses for stock Linux and anyone who uses it for mission critical stuff gets it hardened. But it isn't hardened by default. At least that's what I've heard people say.

    • @TActually
      @TActually Год назад +7

      @i2Sage Android, in and of itself, is a sandboxed and customized version of Linux. SELINUX (security enhanced Linux) is a Framework that provides advanced sandboxing capabilities for standard Linux OSes. There are other Sandboxing tools for Linux like Firejail and AppArmor. FireJail would probably be the most Safety Net like of the bunch.

  • @trevorford8332
    @trevorford8332 Год назад +220

    I'm usually paranoid when it comes to privacy and security, but that's one thing I forgot to do is encrypt my hard drive.

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад +42

      I always forget about it too!

    • @Agryphos
      @Agryphos Год назад +14

      I honestly skipped it on my latest install because my luks mapper broke suddenly on my last install for some mysterious reason 😅

    • @goku445
      @goku445 Год назад +2

      Everyone should be. Our freedom depends on it.

    • @RogueRen
      @RogueRen Год назад +29

      I have my laptop encrypted but not my desktop, mainly due to the fact that it would take SIGNIFICANTLY more effort to get to my desktop's drives than just snagging my laptop in public

    • @SIMULATAN
      @SIMULATAN Год назад +3

      Same, but then again I use arch btw and fear that I'll have to do some system maintenance from a chroot and need to mount the FS externally

  • @LeonisYT
    @LeonisYT Год назад +53

    Again, you always have at least one or 2 programs in these things that I've never heard of, but are super useful. Thanks

  • @TheAyrrow
    @TheAyrrow Год назад +22

    something that's worth mentioning if you've got a laptop is usbguard. Prevents usb devices from functioning until you manually whitelist them. Fantastic if you're in an environment where you're required to move around (you'd also ideally be able to lock your laptop, but when you're presenting that's not always possible). Great for universities and schools!

  • @michelfug
    @michelfug Год назад +43

    For the record: Portmaster's SPN and Tor may share some properties, they are definitely quite different
    Specifically: With Tor you usually use the same chain for each request (within the same Tor-connection), and the chain is longer than 2, with SPN (as I understand it) you use different routes per request, but always with a 'chain' of just 2

    • @beardlyinteresting
      @beardlyinteresting Год назад

      The chain is somewhat cusomisable, if I recall correctly you have a toggle for speed/security/middle

  • @TheJackiMonster
    @TheJackiMonster Год назад +13

    Long term the solution for most convenient encryption is homed (from systemd). You can store and encrypt your whole home directory per user inside a file. This file can be moved between devices but only accessed with the users password. The advantage is that it supports using the password from login to decrypt during login. So you don't need multiple passwords on boot/startup. Also this makes a lot of sense for multi-user setups which would weaken a LUKS partition with one password to share.

  • @BraxtonMeyer
    @BraxtonMeyer Год назад +35

    Wine works so well, it will even run windows viruses.

  • @Somebody-tl4ns
    @Somebody-tl4ns Год назад +9

    Nice video.
    My suggestions:
    1)
    The biggest security tool (after knowledge and caution 😉) is selinux in enforcing mode, and I think it is not mentioned here.
    2)
    Update everything often. I do it every day with one click.
    3)
    Don't install software from not trusted sources.
    4)
    Don't give your user the permission to run software as "root", unless you know what you are doing.
    Become root instead, when needed.
    5)
    05:20 "virus ... can access your linux system entirely".
    That's not exact.
    They can access what the user which runs it can access.
    Therefore nothing that can be accessed only by another user, be it "root" or another.
    It is also noteworthy that a malware which targets Windows, has no effect on linux.
    To have effect, it should be a malware which runs via wine *and* it targets linux.

  • @montecorbit8280
    @montecorbit8280 Год назад +7

    At 10:09
    VPNs....
    He should have mentioned that VPN users should check the legality of using a VPN in their area. Currently, vpns illegal in Russia, Iran, China, last I heard India. Pakistan, Vietnam, and Thailand might also have restrictions on them. Since China and India combined has nearly 40% human population, there is a significant number of people that cannot use them....

    • @とふこ
      @とふこ Год назад +3

      In china using vpn is legal just selling vpn is not. Because vpn is necessary for foreigner companies to work in china and for a lot of students... Yeah the Chinese government don't like people to use foreigner websites but it is not illegal in china of someone using it after someone got vpn access outside china.

    • @montecorbit8280
      @montecorbit8280 Год назад +1

      @@とふこ
      That is a loophole that I did not know of....

  • @My-noname
    @My-noname Год назад +7

    As we grow, this will be a more and more important topic. Tnx, mate. Infotained as usual.

  • @sprtwlf9314
    @sprtwlf9314 Год назад +33

    Great video. I really love privacy and security content. You present the tools in a way everyone can understand. Thanks.

  • @13thravenpurple94
    @13thravenpurple94 Год назад +23

    Thank you Nick 💜💜💜 Please do a video where the default security apps are configured such as AppArmor, UFW and SELinux 🙏🙏🙏

  • @donald1792
    @donald1792 Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @Torviticus
    @Torviticus Год назад +3

    Thanks for putting together this list. Looking forward to looking through some of these tools.

  • @vesiolaiapuma570
    @vesiolaiapuma570 Год назад +1

    1:41😂😂
    The cat is pawsome!😊🐈

  • @youtube.user.1234
    @youtube.user.1234 Год назад +4

    Great video, Nick!

  • @SIMULATAN
    @SIMULATAN Год назад +5

    now THAT is a great browser recommendation segment!
    Told everyone about the tracking, explained a proper chromium alternative BUT also mention the monopoly of google.

  • @IgorEngelen1974
    @IgorEngelen1974 Год назад +6

    Always have been a big fan of AV solutions that capture viruses on the fly rather then by doing scans.

  • @MrToup
    @MrToup Год назад +4

    I really like this video as the one about your workspace with Fedora. Always interesting to see how we can improve how we use Linux.
    Thanks a lot for sharing.

  • @ktsmells
    @ktsmells Год назад +4

    Was literally just about to look into Linux security. What timing!

  • @frederickwood9116
    @frederickwood9116 Год назад +1

    Nice collection. Thanks for creating this one.

  • @aekaydubs
    @aekaydubs 9 месяцев назад

    As I begin my Linux journey, this channel has been invaluable! I’m glad I found it

  • @AS-hy4bp
    @AS-hy4bp Год назад +1

    Great video as always Nick

  • @arimcbrown
    @arimcbrown Год назад +3

    Lol, "It won't shout at you in the middle of the night it's updated" ... I sense some Avast trauma's there XD

  • @DaltonMyWorld
    @DaltonMyWorld Год назад +3

    Very good and needed video....thanks

  • @kidgoku1984
    @kidgoku1984 Год назад +1

    These types of videos are super helpful I always learn something new even if I knew some of these apps. Thanks!

  • @RupakSinha
    @RupakSinha 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the brilliant video Nick. Contemplating on moving back to Linux after a hiatus of many years (because of being forced into using Windows in the corporate environment). Found several new tools that I didn't know existed, Portmaster being one! You've got a new subscriber!

  • @brianclarke8503
    @brianclarke8503 Год назад

    Another great video and some useful tools/apps in my journey through linux!

  • @deloller2452
    @deloller2452 Год назад +2

    Super content, i was looking for such programs

  • @st0rmrider
    @st0rmrider Год назад +5

    USBguard is an extra security step, if you can handle the annoyance.

  • @jd31068
    @jd31068 Год назад +1

    Thanks Nick, for another great video!

  • @goku445
    @goku445 Год назад +8

    Note that shred isn't effective on SSD like it is on mechanical hard drives.

    • @loc4725
      @loc4725 Год назад +1

      It'll wear it out.
      Better option is often the SSD's inbuilt "secure erase" facility, assuming your BIOS allows it or just *one* pass with:
      dd if=/dev/urandom of=/dev/your_ssd bs=4096k conv=fdatasync
      Followed by mkfs & fstrim.

    • @deloller2452
      @deloller2452 Год назад

      What's the alternative?

    • @goku445
      @goku445 Год назад

      @@loc4725 Yeah but it reduces your device's lifespan and more importantly it is very unpractical as you need to erase the WHOLE disk even if you wanted to destroy one file.

    • @goku445
      @goku445 Год назад

      @@deloller2452 Full encryption. There is no alternative that I know of.

    • @loc4725
      @loc4725 Год назад

      @@goku445 Well deleting one file on an SSD will usually just cause those pages to be marked 'free' with the hope that they will later be purged by a subsequent trim() operation. They are still there and in theory could still be recovered.
      That said encrypting the drive works but but you _cannot_ just wipe the key; like the above the page containing it will remain until trimmed. To ensure and proper ease you'd have to either write so much data to the device that it runs out of spare pages and forces it to a trim or use the _secure erase_ feature (BIOS permitting), which hopefully will only erase the dirty pages.

  • @raute2687
    @raute2687 Год назад +1

    This channel is a goldmine!

  • @peterkornos8749
    @peterkornos8749 Год назад

    Super useful information. Thank you. I will try many of them.

  • @burning_KFC
    @burning_KFC Год назад

    As always writing a comment to support the channel

  • @Zeioth
    @Zeioth Год назад

    This info is incredible. My respects. Thank you.

  • @turun_ambartanen
    @turun_ambartanen Год назад +28

    The issue with opt in telemetry is that it provides a very distorted view of user behavior. Only people who check the settings and want telemetry will turn it on. That's such a small and restricted sample.
    It's much more important what is shared than if it is shared by default or not.

    • @leeo17
      @leeo17 Год назад +9

      ​@@hello-iw9pdi missed the part where he talked about not giving the users choice

    • @NikolasHonnef
      @NikolasHonnef Год назад +1

      ​@hello Opt-out is still a choice, no? I think FF does this very well, if you consider that opt-in heavily reduces the usefulness of the collected data. They tell you very prominently that they are collecting some data, and where to turn it off.

    • @turun_ambartanen
      @turun_ambartanen Год назад +1

      ​@hello No? How did you read that from my comment?
      I'm just saying that if you want to get high quality telemetry data your average user must have telemetry turned on. This is neither a case for telemetry, nor one against it. It's simply a fact. Your average user won't fiddle with the settings.
      Even without any telemetry you can still improve your product - based on Github Issues and angry mails sent your way - but that simply won't reflect the usage patterns of your average user.

  • @MegaManNeo
    @MegaManNeo Год назад +6

    Plasma by now comes with something like flatseal... if the used distro has updated packages.
    My issue with flatseal is mainly that for a normal user, various descriptions just make downright no sense.
    Otherwise your list is great, Nick!

    • @softwarelivre2389
      @softwarelivre2389 Год назад

      True. But it bears reminding that elementaryOS had something like than even before Flatseal got famous.

  • @franciscogtome
    @franciscogtome Год назад

    Great tips for Linux users! Thank you very much 💪🏻

  • @alecscher5385
    @alecscher5385 Год назад

    Thanks, a very helpful intro!

  • @randomperson6411
    @randomperson6411 Год назад +3

    5:08 Will be helpful :)

  • @oclasos
    @oclasos Год назад +4

    I love full disk encryption but god damn it's so hard to troubleshoot a Linux install when the drive is encrypted; if only somebody could make it easier... 😅

  • @michelfug
    @michelfug Год назад +4

    Can I add usbguard (and usbguard-notifier) to the list? It protects you from sneaky malware filled USB drives or other Bad USB devices slipped into your ports. A must have for anyone who works for a company that may be actively targeted for hacks (banks, infra, govt, etc)

  • @ramirogallo6484
    @ramirogallo6484 Год назад

    Really like this video!
    Thanks!

  • @praetorxyn
    @praetorxyn Год назад +5

    It would be cool to see you review a Framework laptop, as they're basically open source hardware, so I would assume they're very compatible with Linux, but it would be nice to have confirmation.

    • @constancies
      @constancies Год назад +1

      As a Framework owner I can say it’s generally a good experience. Only problem is that its screen is very high res , which means fractional scaling is preferred for an optimal experience, but on GNOME you’ll either have to deal with screen tearing or blurry XWayland apps. I personally wouldn’t recommend it if you use GNOME, but if you’re more of a KDE or WM person, it’ll work great.

    • @praetorxyn
      @praetorxyn Год назад +1

      @@constancies I had a similar experience with an old ThinkPad W550S back in 2015 or 2016, and ended up selling it to buy a MacBook hoping I’d have less issues. I prefer KDE but they really ought to fix that, fractional scaling is such a basic thing.

  • @goku445
    @goku445 Год назад +3

    Merci!

  • @qzddzdwx
    @qzddzdwx 7 месяцев назад

    Super interesting, thanks !

  • @prolitcom
    @prolitcom Год назад

    I've been using Zorinn for a half a year, and it's been great. The district on the website is old enough, but it updates the system regularly. I would revise that decision of yours

  • @MarkyDav
    @MarkyDav Год назад +2

    Ah a fellow Ecosia enjoyer I see ^_^

  • @jean-francoistasse7788
    @jean-francoistasse7788 11 месяцев назад

    8:33 if you have an application that you don't trust some of it's internet connection... should the application not be on your computer in the first place?

  • @ktsmells
    @ktsmells Год назад +1

    This video was really helpful! Any suggestions for software/tools which can backup and rollback Linux if needed? Thank you.

  • @aliasname5518
    @aliasname5518 Год назад +2

    How does encrypting the hard drive work together with dual booting *sigh* windows?

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад +6

      Shouldn’t have an impact, you’ll just encrypt the Linux partitions

    • @Linux_ASMR
      @Linux_ASMR Год назад

      If you want to encrypt your files like documents or pictures, I can suggest cryptomator. It works on both Linux and windows and is open source. That way if you store your personal files on a separate partition you can open them on both Linux and windows.

  • @synosahil
    @synosahil Год назад +1

    Very very cool i will definitely try them

  • @philevans7238
    @philevans7238 Год назад

    Hello, first a big thank you for your videos! really informative and useful. I have installed portmaster and find it very good, my question which is probably a stupid one is do I keep GUFW firewall now or remove it. Regards Phil

  • @moetocafe
    @moetocafe Год назад

    Useful, thank you!

  • @Anondady
    @Anondady Год назад +1

    Hi, do you have a link for the obfuscate program? Thanks in advance.

  • @linuxstreamer8910
    @linuxstreamer8910 Год назад +1

    also i would say replace librewolf for the mullvad browers it is like the tor browser without tor

  • @okay4634
    @okay4634 Год назад

    7:28 No Opensnitch firewall
    9:00 Mullvad VPN
    11:08 No Ungoogled Chromium

  • @ruthlessadmin
    @ruthlessadmin Год назад

    Nice one, thanks!

  • @Dew4lk
    @Dew4lk Год назад +1

    What about enabling firewall with gufw?

  • @marcuswest4572
    @marcuswest4572 Год назад

    I enjoy your videos Nick, which cover really useful stuff. Having just had a warranty anulled on my HP for having installed exotic software, (i.e. Linux), I am wondering whether it will soon be necessary to tux up. Geekom assure me that they are not Linux-phobic. For portmaster on Fedora, it is necessary to make it play nice with Selinux
    I do a cron job system update that runs every time I turn on. Will definitely be exploring these tools you mention.

  • @zaixai9441
    @zaixai9441 Год назад +2

    Can someone go into more detail about blurring being easy to unblur?

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад +2

      Basically a Gaussian blur just “smears” pixels in a certain direction, and it’s easy to determine the direction and strength and undo it

  • @drewo.127
    @drewo.127 Год назад

    Just a quick question:
    I’m thinking of downloading ClamAV, Portmaster, and most likely Flatseal. But I wanna double check with you to see if Having all that software together will mess everything up?
    Like would the security from Portmaster clash with the security of ClamAV?
    I know Clam is antivirus software, and Portmaster is firewall and network monitoring software, but would they interfere with each other?
    Same with Flatseal if I add that to my system too?

  • @RoguishlyHandsome
    @RoguishlyHandsome Год назад

    As the vast majority of systems have SSDs now, "shredding" files does not work. Encryption is your best friend, as well as ensuring TRIM is executed regularly and hoping it is correctly implemented.
    I personally have a ton of ram, encrypted swap file, mount /tmp as tmpfs, and mount an addition temp space in my home folder as tmpfs. I have tens of gigabytes of in-memory storage for things that do not have to be saved. You can symlink a bunch of work folders from various apps to this space and end up not crowding tons of subfolders with crap.

  • @balb4903
    @balb4903 10 месяцев назад

    Great video but i wonder if Portmaster actually works on Debian and if it's better than firewalls like ufw or firewalld ?

  • @raptag7114
    @raptag7114 Год назад

    Hey, I have a question:
    When I enable system encryption on installation, do I have to type the security key every time I open my computer

    • @adambyte256
      @adambyte256 Год назад

      Yes

    • @raptag7114
      @raptag7114 Год назад

      @@adambyte256 aw man, I guess no encryption for me ☠️

  • @overlordmarkus
    @overlordmarkus Год назад +1

    Oh my, Nick, why would you feel the need to scan those Warhammer novels you surely aquired from the reliable and fairly priced Black Library? But back to Wine, wouldn't deleting the Z: folder that links to your /home directory and restricting Lutris/Steam to a dedicated folder with Flatseal solve most security concerns?

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад +2

      The worse part is, I actually bought most of not all of them 😂
      I think it would help, yeah. As long as the app that runs Wine is sandboxed, you’re probably relatively safe, apart from what the virus might access while the program is running

  • @xbeast7585
    @xbeast7585 Год назад

    Thanks Man 💓

  • @gerrygadget
    @gerrygadget Год назад +3

    For max privacy you have to use a new device that has never had its ID seen on the internet with any assocation to you.

  • @jonathandawson3091
    @jonathandawson3091 Год назад

    Instead of firejail or firetools, I'd recommend bwrap. It's command line and it's what flatpak uses underneath.

  • @einsteinorwell
    @einsteinorwell 3 месяца назад

    I just installed ClamTK using Discover on MX Linux KDE but it doesn't appear in any menu and there's no search result for it. Maybe it will show up when I reboot the system. Anyone else had any problems after installing it?

  • @NeverlandSystemZor
    @NeverlandSystemZor Год назад

    Wow, this is a great of apps. I didn't even know some of these existed.

  • @The1mAgiN4ry
    @The1mAgiN4ry Год назад

    Is Brave search worth using privacy wise as it is the default search engine on the Brave browser?

  • @Axenide
    @Axenide Год назад +1

    Title: APPS & TOOLS
    My brain: APRIL FOOLS
    Me: Kinda late huh?

  • @RoguishlyHandsome
    @RoguishlyHandsome Год назад

    Portmaster isn't available on flathub or from the apt repo on ubuntu, at least not on 22.04. For a long time, Ubuntu/Mint has come with a builtin firewall frontend to ufw. ufw is easy to use, especially if you want to quickly enable the must have security settings: block incoming. Adding exceptions is also a breeze. I'm used to manage it from the command line, but the frontend seems intuitive enough.
    Some people will tell you you don't need a firewall because you're behind a router. You should not take advice from people who discourage you from such simple security measures that have you covered if your wifi gets hacked, or if visitors frequently use your main LAN, or if you take your computer to other locations.

  • @0alsh
    @0alsh Год назад

    Thank you for your video! What do you think about Self Encrypted Drives (SED)?

  • @VEKTOR_87
    @VEKTOR_87 Год назад +1

    hey nick can you make a guide on OBS and how to setup on Linux , the reason im asking is because it is very easy to set up OBS but on linux we dont have a good encoder FFMEG is the default but GloriousEggroll suggested Gstreamer-VAAPI and that works to some extent but when recording a video / game the gpu usage goes 100% all time even when nothing demanding is happening , its a pain to record at 720p30 , going any higher means the gpu usage goes 100% and will slow down the system , even with an RX 570 :(

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад +3

      I can look into it, but I personally only use NVENC with my nvidia GPUs, it is unparalleled

  • @Tekudachi
    @Tekudachi Год назад +1

    Encrypted /home here 😊

  • @stevewillard8212
    @stevewillard8212 Год назад

    I tried full disk encryption on openSUSE, but was frustrated by the double entry of the encryption password during boot. I ended up only encrypting the home directory using the guided setup. Not the up to the level of Fedora or Ubuntu, but at least my personal data is encrypted at rest.

    • @pleonexia4772
      @pleonexia4772 Год назад

      You can embed a keyfile in your initramfs so you don't have to enter your password twice. I've set mine up where I don't even need a password to boot/decrypt partitions, I just use a fido2 key. Compared to yubikeys, hyperfido's fido2 key is a fraction of the cost ($25AUD or $17ish USD) and works perfectly. If you wanna have another go at trying to encrypt your OS again, I can walk you through the process to get everything setup the way you'd like. I can run you through the setup on a VM so you can get comfortable with the process before you attempt it on your harddrive(s).

  • @MarkPlumber-yp3or
    @MarkPlumber-yp3or Год назад

    good video buddy - thx

  • @swagmuffin9000
    @swagmuffin9000 Год назад +1

    clam always tells me it's outdated, and it never scans what i tell it. i have ticked the right options, and looked at tutorials, haven't gotten it to work :( other than that, thanks for all of the really good suggestions!

    • @dmknght8946
      @dmknght8946 Год назад

      My honest advice: dont use clam. I played with clamAV engine, its signature, ... More than a year and i can tell it's not strong enough against malwares. (No disrespect to clam team. They are cool guys providing clam for free)

    • @Komatik_
      @Komatik_ Год назад +1

      Clam is probably worse than not having anything in the first place because as far as I know its detection rates are quite low and that can give the user a false sense of security.

    • @swagmuffin9000
      @swagmuffin9000 Год назад

      @@Komatik_ ok, that makes me feel a little better

    • @swagmuffin9000
      @swagmuffin9000 Год назад

      @@dmknght8946 yea, that's the thing, it always says the signature is outdated even after updating. I don't typically download things, but on the off chance i do, I would want something to check.

    • @dmknght8946
      @dmknght8946 Год назад +2

      yeah as in malware scanner (which is the actual job of current clamav, it supports only hash checking and pattern matching (a lot of ClamAV old signatures depends on hashes. I meant if anybody compare ClamAV with Yara, Yara has more techniques to detect malware (or binaries in general) than ClamAV. As a AV, ClamAV doesn't have process scan (or memory scan- last time i check). It doesn't have syscall / function call hook checking either. And the most important thing, IMO, is the emulator to detect packed, encrypted malware.
      Overall, ClamAV is the only truly open source AntiVirus engine out there. But it's not enough to defend user against malware, especially modern malware.

  • @shabang71
    @shabang71 Год назад

    Is it possibile to encrypt a specific folder, making it possible to open it only with a password in GNOME?

    • @softwarelivre2389
      @softwarelivre2389 Год назад

      You can compress a folder with a password on GNOME, but the regular folder, that I do not know.

  • @ashawesome7234
    @ashawesome7234 Год назад +6

    While good start, the ultimate secure OS is obviously templeOS.

    • @st0rmrider
      @st0rmrider Год назад

      Actually CubeOS if you manage to make it work

    • @joebob4579
      @joebob4579 День назад

      Its not wrtten in holy c tho​@@st0rmrider

  • @jonathandawson3091
    @jonathandawson3091 Год назад

    I would tout gocryptfs instead of ecryptutils for file system encryption.

  • @rodfer5406
    @rodfer5406 Год назад

    Must see video

  • @TylerHaley
    @TylerHaley 5 дней назад

    thanks

  • @danielfernandez449
    @danielfernandez449 Год назад

    Which Linux distro did you use for this video?

  • @michelle778
    @michelle778 10 месяцев назад +2

    doesn't ecosia use bing as search engine? Besides the crappy results - last time I checked the environmental footprint of bing servers was worse than googles and ecosia planting trees could not mitigate that. Ecosias idea paired with real privacy and servers that don't waste the trees again would be great.

  • @snax_4820
    @snax_4820 Год назад

    Still looking for a tool capable of encrypt a folder easily and that works with Linux and Windows.

  • @veterantruthtube3298
    @veterantruthtube3298 Год назад

    where is the techlore link?

  • @vladik_yt3186
    @vladik_yt3186 5 месяцев назад

    3:29 we will tell him about Veracrypt?

  • @manankataria
    @manankataria Год назад

    Since we talking of security can someone tell me why does linux firewalld make chromecast and kde connect not work ( at least in firewalld kde connect has a service ) what about chromecast and airplay I use services called cider that helps me use my family apple music account .

  • @Newemka
    @Newemka Год назад +1

    LOL it won't wake you up in the middle of the night 🤣😂

  • @toxay
    @toxay Год назад

    14:49 macbook killer

  • @linuxstreamer8910
    @linuxstreamer8910 Год назад

    for tail is persistent not the wrong word because for me it means that all my data is saved even when i unplug it

  • @awesomemantroll1088
    @awesomemantroll1088 Месяц назад

    I don't get it. What is the difference between Windows bitlocker and Linux disk encryption?

  • @jakobw135
    @jakobw135 2 месяца назад

    Will Kaspersky work with Linux?

  • @THE16THPHANTOM
    @THE16THPHANTOM Год назад

    read how flatpak works. pretty neat system. my worries about every tiny app taking 2 gig hard dist were put to rest. no more nightmares when this guy is talking about flatpaks.