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USB Debugging Samsung Phone with a GUI

Is there a GUI which I can just click and disable and enable packages debugging Samsung Android phones? I heard that there are options which are much simpler than vanilla ADB. I just want to get rid ofll the Samsung/Google/Meta bloat prepackaged with the phone. Appreciate any pointers/advice.

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  • Google then sells your data to data brokers and anyone willing to pay a pretty penny. In the end it doesnt matter if your device is only bleeding out of the Google hole exclusively because everyone else can just buy it off Google (who probably does a better job at deanonymising and aggregating your data.

  • Hiroshima marks a-bomb anniversary, calls nuclear deterrence "folly"
  • The US can't even fess up and and rectify the sysyemic violence happening domestically to its first nation people, blacks and people of colour. How about they begin there and then atone for what they've done to the rest of the world. Ukraine is a US proxy war with Russia. And war keeps the US rich and powerful. Couple that with a crumbling education system, social support and religion and you have a decent supply of young men and woment to enlist. Nobody outside the US would buy the nonsense you just spewed. Go pick your cherries elsewhere.

  • what messaging app do you use?
  • Signal desktop is designed to be a stand alone app that uses the phone phone to first verify the connection via QR but after that relays messages, calls, erc direct from and to the server, inrependently of the phone app.

  • A teachers union says it’s fed up with social media’s impact on students
  • Opening para from a NYT article on the Waldorf School in Silicon Valley:

    "The chief technology officer of eBay sends his children to a nine-classroom school here. So do employees of Silicon Valley giants like Google, Apple, Yahoo and Hewlett-Packard.

    But the school’s chief teaching tools are anything but high-tech: pens and paper, knitting needles and, occasionally, mud. Not a computer to be found. No screens at all. They are not allowed in the classroom, and the school even frowns on their use at home."

    https://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/23/technology/at-waldorf-school-in-silicon-valley-technology-can-wait.html

  • What's your opinion on telegram from a foss and privacy perspective?
  • Unless you want to run communities there I wont bother with it. I feel everything from setting up accounts (anonymously) to getting people to join, works better in SimpleX and Session. I'd even be happy using SimpleX as my everyday messenger. Matrix is a little clunky and the fact that all conversations get duplicated on the primary Matrix servers is cause for concern.

    With Signal and SimpleX, servers are used only for relaying messages beteeen users - messages which are encrypted on the device.

    In the end you are going to be sacrificing something, and the last thing you'd want to sacrifice is privacy and security.

    If I was pushed to list my go to, it'll be Signal for chats with people I know: because its open source, battle-tested against adversities, and can be set up by anyone who understands how ro use Whastsapp / Telegram.

    For communitties (and even as a daily text solution beteeen collaborators or anyone you dont want to exchange numbers with), I'd use SimpleX as it has a lot of in-built anonymity and decent privacy (so far - its a fairly new project).

    Theres just too much fuzziness round Matrix for anyone to trust it.

  • What's your opinion on telegram from a foss and privacy perspective?
  • Telegram is neither private nor secure. Its not encrypted bu default. Normal texts as well as group chat is stored unencrypted on its servers.

    For everyday use with friends, family and work (assuming these folks already have your number), Signal may be the best thing out there as its open source both on server and app levels. Signal is also end to end encrypted (E2EE) with decryption keys stored on device.

    For anonymous communications Session and SimpleX may be better as they are both E2EE and doesnt requie a phone number as an identifier.

    Just chuck out Whatsapp, Telegram and all the other closed sourced garbage apps.

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    How can you distinguish whether a platform is a scam or not, other than through open-sourcing?
  • If you are reffering to Signal then both app and server are open source. Just that the server is centralised.

    For community building, try checking out SimpleX. Its open source and has an interesting take on anonynity. Plus it doesnt require phone numbers to create a user identity.

    As for either being censorship resistant, I am unsure how we'll they'd cope. But my guess is they would perform just fine in most scenarios.

  • The official chat room for a privacy community is discord?
  • Out of curiosity, why Matrix and not these other options:

    • Jabber/XMPP - has a creat client called Conversations (decentralised)
    • SimpleX - by far the most anonymous and potentially decent privacy (centralised server)
    • Session - a Signal fork without requiring phone number
    • all of the above are listed on F-Droid
  • InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)BR
    brzrd @lemmy.world
    • photojournalist, curator, FOSS and privacy enthusiast
    Posts 1
    Comments 23