What if we don’t need decentralization but just something centralized but legally out of capitalism like a coop or a foundation?
Digital Community Building
This community is intended as a place for discussion regarding building digital communities and spaces. The intended audience are the admins, moderators, and curators of digital spaces, not general purpose users. The idea is that by facilitating discussion between the organizers and activists managing these communities, a set of best practices will begin to organically emerge.
Links
What to post?
- Your personal experiences
- Services that you think communities may find useful
- Questions regarding establishing a new community
- Discussions on what makes an effective online community
- Guides for making the most of existing services
I Don't See Anything
Remember, federation for small/new communities is finicky and this is a project targeting a small audience. Federation will eventually improve as the project advances.
Consider checking in on the home instance to make sure you see everything.
Related Communities
!fediverse@lemmy.world
!moderators@lemmy.world
!trendingcommunities@feddit.nl
!communitypromo@lemmy.ca
!newcommunities@lemmy.world
Sadly email is just a dead horse at this point. It's usually not even the alternative provider's fault that their service is unreliable.
Yeah, email is dead to me for the most part.
There are gov agencies and various other essential transactions that force people to use email. It’s easy to quit sending email but there are too many situations forcing ppl to supply an email address. If they put that little fucking red asterisk next to the email field on a webform, there is a gun to your head. You choices are to get service or walk. That’s where onionmail is handy. It can sometimes pass the syntax check, and then it’s dysfunctional to all but expert users (which is the idea).
But indeed I send paper letters like crazy now and almost never email.
I find proton to be a pretty solid offering actually. What exactly are you trying to do with protonmail you aren't allowed to do?
Protonmail wants you using their GUI so you can see ads, IIRC. The biggest problem with that is they ship dynamic js to you on-the-fly which could harvest your key after seeing your IP. There are a few ways to avoid that:
- pay for their bridge feature (payment itself introduces a privacy issue)
- use hydroxide -- this was great until it broke in two ways: a bug in hydroxide and also the chronic CAPTCHA problem
- use electronmail and the onion host -- this avoids untrustworthy js, but you are trapped inside a stupidly bloated app that embeds a whole fucking browser inside of it. And the CAPTCHAs still come.
If you overcome those factors (which I can’t because the CAPTCHA problem is chronic in my case, even via the onion), then there is still the problem that you must login periodically on the gratis account, or lose it. Notifications combined with Hydroxide made PM usable for a while but when a show-stopper bug sat idle for like a year or something I gave up waiting for progress, which was unlikely to get around the CAPTCHA problem anyway.
For me Google reCAPTCHA is a show-stopper by itself. I will not solve those, even if it’s to reach a gratis service.
Hushmail 15 years ago was much better than Protonmail is today, largely because expert users could do all the key management so their tech illiterate correspondants didn’t even have to know that keys are in play. Protonmail requires even the low tech users to know how to put a public key of someone into their addressbook. It takes a lot of arm-twisting just get security apathetic users into a new account. As soon as they have to take key management steps, it’s blown. Hushmail gave me a way to securely talk to accountants and lawyers.
Perhaps its the ad-catchers I use but i don't see any when I'm using proton webmail. I also don't see any CAPTCHA usually but I don't log in and out that much. I realise i'm trading security for convenience there.
The security aspects you bring up are real - key management is more than I would ask normal people to do. You can use crypto to pay for the service, if you can aquire some without going through ridiculous KYC that might be a more acceptable level of anonymity.
You seem much more opsec intelligent than me, thanks for the informative reply! Really enjoying the community around here.
It’s an interesting point about staying logged in. In principle, hydroxide could be coded to login once and retain the cookie and reuse the same session cookie to check for new mail every 30 min to keep the cookie alive. And it could run on an always-on PC. That would probably cut back on the CAPTCHAs. That would be a good suggestion to the Hydroxide project because the CAPTCHAs make hydroxide a pain in the ass. People have to use a gui to login if a CAPTCHA hits, then pass the cookie back to hydroxide IIRC.