Overview of all pages with the tag #Tracking the Trackers, such as: Scanning apps, off the record| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Open Source, such as: 7ASecurity Completes Security Audit of Círculo| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Nlnet, such as: The Search for Ethical Apps: Let's start with governments| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Distribution, such as: Distribution in Depth: Mirrors as a Source of Resiliency| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Debian, such as: Debian over HTTPS| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Android, such as: IOCipher 1.0 community reboot| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Tracking, such as: The Search for Ethical Apps: Let's start with governments| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Tor, such as: Arti, next-gen Tor on mobile| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Privacy, such as: 7ASecurity Completes Security Audit of Círculo| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Fdroid, such as: A Look Back at 2024: F-Droid's Progress and What’s Coming in 2025| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #F Droid, such as: A Look Back at 2024: F-Droid's Progress and What’s Coming in 2025| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Clean Insights, such as: Privacy Preserving Analytics in the Real World: Mailvelope Case Study| Guardian Project
Overview of all pages with the tag #Bazaar, such as: Building a Signing Server| Guardian Project
Smart phones have brought us so many wonderful capabilities. They let people around the world access vast realms of information. They let app developers solve problems large and small in a way most relevent to their local context. They are personal computers for the world. They also have given surveillance capitalism an unprecedented reach into everyone’s lives. Repressive governments use them in ways that the East German Stasi secret police could only have dreamed of.| Guardian Project
As part of the DEfO project, we have been working on accelerating the development Encrypted Client Hello (ECH) as standardized by the IETF. ECH is the next step in improving Transport Layer Security (TLS). TLS is one of the basic building blocks of the internet, it is what puts the S in HTTPS. The ECH standard is nearing completion. That is exciting because ECH can encrypt the last plaintext TLS metadata that it is possible to encrypt.| Guardian Project
There is a giant problem with the “collect it all” status quo that pervades on the Internet, this has been clear for a long time. Tracking people has become so widespread that organizations, communities, projects and university labs have sprung up dedicated to detecting and publicizing their presence. Data and analytics are clearly useful for software creators and funders, but they also easily lead to harming people’s privacy and well-being.| Guardian Project
One thing that has become very clear over the past years is that there is a lot of value in data about people. Of course, the most well known examples these days are advertising and spy agencies, but tracking data is useful for many more things. For example, when trying to build software that is intuitive and easy to use, having real data about how people are using the software can make a massive difference when developers and designers are working on improving their software.| Guardian Project