

*urban microplastics (because most nano- and microplastics released into the environment come from commercial fishing by far)


*urban microplastics (because most nano- and microplastics released into the environment come from commercial fishing by far)


There are plenty of smaller exchanges without KYC. Further, most decentralised exchanges do not need KYC. And laundering the crypto through privacy-focussed coins makes the stolen funds (near) untraceable.
There are several methods to turn stolen crypto into real wealth. It is easy because there’s still very little actual regulation to mitigate this and law enforcement does not have the capacity attuned to crypto-theft and crypto-laundering.
Methods include using shell companies (e.g Changpeng Zhao, former CEO of Binance, and the original founders of Bitfinex, the list goes on), creating, owning and wash trading their own cryptocurrencies (e.g. USDT of Bitfinex), using money mules, and “gifting” or allocating assets to friends, family, and employees or colleagues (e.g. Nayiem Willems of the Altilly and the XeggeX exit scams). Desirable real-world assets are real-estate: Renting out an apartment, villa, or BnB supplies them with infinite clean money. If their identity is known and being pursued by law enforcement, they will move to a different country or jurisdiction (e.g. Paul Edward Vernon of the Cryptsy exit scam). Sometimes they will bribe politicians or law enforcement.
I can recommend some documentaries on Netflix: “Bitconned” (about the Centra exit scam), "Trust no One: The hunt for the crypto king (about the QuadriCex exit scam), “Biggest heist ever” (about the mystery behind the Bitfinex “hack”). Coffeezilla on YouTube also has some reportages on the dodgy practices of the Bitfinex founders.


What is not mentioned… there’s no privacy when the device itself is compromised. For instance, Android phones can read and phone home data from your notifications. In that case, any messenger app wouldn’t be private from Google’s eyes.


To be fair, it is official supported hardware for Mobian and PostMarketOS


Although syncthing is awesome, i use rclone to fetch the latest version of the password database. With syncthing, i would worry about collisions. Maybe would be better to sync it between two devices, Android and Linux.


Yes and no. You can store them in a free cloud account, provided you have local copies; there’s a risk your access to the cloud storage could be denied. A security risk is that they could harvest these databases, and decrypt them later.
I think your best bet, if you were to use free services, is to delete old databases from the cloud. Encrypt the new databases with the updated password manager and a new master password.
No. It’s safer to install Windows and Linux/GNU on separate disks. Whatever you do, install Windows first, Linux second.


127 TB of data in the env? That’s a lot


Mullvad has an option in the settings to enable their own DNS filters.


You can remove the (tracking) part in the URL after the question mark, like so https://resistmap.substack.com/p/they-took-his-gun-then-they-shot
Check out Autonomi: fully decentralised internet
How’s Tutamail any better than Proton Mail? Help me understand. And if Tutamail’s priority is not your money, then what is it? There’s no such thing as a free thing after all (?).