Music scrobbling solves that issue for me. Navidrome integrates well with for example last.fm. In addition to having my music listening history there one can find recommendations based on their music taste
Music scrobbling solves that issue for me. Navidrome integrates well with for example last.fm. In addition to having my music listening history there one can find recommendations based on their music taste
AnntenaPod is the way
torrenting over tor would be exhaustive for the onions.
on f-droid there is a hardened firefox fork: mull
Aurora Store works like a charm without ads or tracking.
It does replace system webview.
Both Vanadium and Mulch are powerful. Mulch is Divest os default vebview and is using Vanadium patches. While the Vanadium is Graphene one.
https://gitlab.com/divested-mobile/mulch
https://github.com/GrapheneOS/Vanadium
I stick with Mulch, because I added divest repo to Droidify, so I can upgrade webview as soon new update comes out. No need to wait for module update.
Haven’t found a good way to easily update Vanadium. On XDA module’s thread you can read about it.
https://xdaforums.com/t/magisk-module-webview-open-webview-2-3-1.4496119/
if you root, you can install open webview module.
currently using mulch webview and updating it in f-droid
Btw, modern cars are often nightmare for privacy. Mozilla has recently posted about it.
However, I saw on github that someone made android auto work with microg!
why so many down votes?
the most useful extensions for android firefox - ublock origin, there is already (and many more). Also, mozilla is working on bringing all desktop add-ons to mobile and everyone can contribute.
don’t recommend manjaro. instead - vanilla arch or endeavour os
It’s funny that recently NetworkChuck uploaded video about darkweb where he installed tor on windows and now apparently many folks did the same.
Actually it’s pretty easy. You can import from gmail much more than just mails but also setup fowarding new gmail mails to proton.
I’m not sure if using Librewolf on desktop or Mull on mobile counts but they are pretty good hardened forks of Firefox.
Firefox is great but the downside is that it isn’t as private as browsers I’ve mentioned by default. Still, it is solid choice from privacy perspective.
Redlib