

Proton’s Lumo is also built to almost always recommend Proton services when asked about secure email, VPNs, cloud storage, etc., so that probably contributed to it hallucinating a “Proton Call”.
You may be able to find me on other platforms by the same name!
Mastodon: specialwall@woof.tech
Contact me on SimpleX or Signal!
Proton’s Lumo is also built to almost always recommend Proton services when asked about secure email, VPNs, cloud storage, etc., so that probably contributed to it hallucinating a “Proton Call”.
To be fair, it is $100/mo, so there is a premium for their privacy benefits.
No, seriously, what’s up with those messages 😭
The AI Generated thumbnail is inexcusable. If that’s a real recipe then they should take a picture of the real thing. 🙁
There will be a six-month period when law enforcement will hand out warning tickets. Starting Jan. 1, 2026, the fines will be $100.
I’m glad that it’s rightfully illegal now, but that seems like kind of a light consequence for endangering everyone around you.
The thundermail domains are thundermail.com and tb.pro. I’m curious to see how they will compare to the top privacy-respecting email providers today, and how they think they will “provid[e] a better service than the other providers out there,” which would include Protonmail, Tutanota, etc.
I kind of have to sympathize with this commenter. Although I don’t agree that federated social media is very difficult, it is definitely more confusing than normal social media. I would consider myself to be more technical than the majority of people, and even I had a confusing time switching from traditional social media to federated platforms.
If the goal is to have these platforms become more mainstream (which I would love to see personally), then there does need to be simpler ways to use them, or at least better, more concise explanations.
The issue of centralization can be a problem, but in regards to metadata, sealed sender does a lot to prevent Signal’s servers from knowing who messages who, which makes Signal a lot more private than described here.
Dumbphones are ridiculously insecure, and they only support SMS communications which don’t have any end-to-end encryption.