ᥫ᭡ 𐑖ミꪜᴵ𝔦 ᥫ᭡

  • 3 Posts
  • 60 Comments
Joined 3 months ago
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Cake day: July 26th, 2024

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  • AFAIK he’s reliable when it comes to facts

    he does have some facts, he only shares the ones that suites his narrative, what kind of journalism is that?! journalism is about following the truth no matter where it goes… but he doesn’t do that, he just misquotes people and say : “see, they said that, what awful people”

    for example, in a recent video he made about the EFF he said that they support kids looking at porn, but off course they never said that, they said they’re against ID’ing people who watch porn, because that’s a serious threat to online anonymity…

    Also in a recent video about the EFF he literally made statements they never made, it was so obvious that one of his loyal conservative fans called him out on it

    surprised he didn’t shadowban this comment, quot

    … My default position is that any software-based organization is going to be run by libtards, but your accusations simply don’t line up with the articles. “If you have the wrong politics, you should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law, that’s their repeated stance they’ve stated over and over”. Links please “If you’re a Republican … and happened to be standing outdoors on that day, you should be in jail. That’s the EFF’s stance.” Again, links please"

    to Lunduke as long as he’s getting push back from the left leaning individuals in these groups, then he must be on the right path, that’s how bias works not truth









  • What it archives though and afaik is intended for is the possibility of easily and quickly “erasing” the disk by just overwriting that encryption key a couple times, I don’t remember if that used a special tool or something but if that is useful to you it probably wouldn’t be hard to find more info on this.

    first of, apologies for the late reply… this reminds me of when I ( not so long ago ), used to overwrite random data into HDDs using Eraser, before selling my laptops or switching a company laptop, I hear SSDs are designed to last longer, so that practice ( of writing random data so it’ll erase the sensitive data ), is “kind of” a time waste now… but I guess it’ll make it hard to retrieve that data, unless the attacker has some specialized software and hardware

    Samsung is a reasonably trustworthy company, not from US/UK, not Chinese, so if they say they have a clean implementation of this I’d trust them

    I wouldn’t trust any company based only on their claims, they need to document ( explain how it works ), develop things in the open ( publish the firmware ), the schematics, even the CAD drawings… like what the folks at System76 and Framework are doing…

    That said, it sure sounds cool to have that level of protection, if only Samsung wasn’t a shitty company already ( in my book )

    Would be kinda a national security issue for them if it wasn’t seeing how Samsung is everywhere in gov an private sector in Korea.

    I’m speculating here, but it wouldn’t be far fetched if they designed a secure encrypted clean hardware for the government with military grade encryption as they like to call it, while the end users receives only enough encryption power to protect against normie threat actors like a spouse…etc companies have these policies where they provide a premium/quality products for businesses and governments but cheap or in many cases poorly made products to end users … like Windows Home