oliver

joined 2 days ago

Still like the idea behind it and wish there was support for GrapheneOS (going even further than /e/o) as well as better camera quality but this is the price we have to pay for flexibility and sustainability I think. Like the concept here but never tried to go with one so far.

Well, there is some work to do with identifying the device in your network (which shouldn’t be the problem) and monitor the connections over a specific time. When (as happened with ECOVACS) a single device frequently connects to DNS and HTTPS reaching a single IP belonging to this vendor, this is regulated quite easily with a proper firewall. Without the insights, this is (like you wrote) difficult to accomplish and yes, there may be false positives. Also separating those devices within an own VLAN could be part of a (individual) scenario.

Samsung mostly talks to specific hosts, LG does as well and searching for firmware triggers different targets. These are easy to find if you know what you‘re doing but this depends on setup and knowledge. It‘s a hare-and-tortoise-race though.

The safest way would be disabling the WiFi or LAN-connection if you don“t need any of the services shipped with the devices but while this may work for TVs, it may make your Vacuum Cleaner useless as the specific app for that device won‘t work anymore.

[–] oliver@lemmy.neuralwhisper.eu 1 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Works with both vendors if looking into Pi-hole‘s logs and once they should really hardcode the DNS or similar stuff here, the connection will be disabled (which is the best way to deal with this anyway apart from updating firmware if you use an external box).

Once they try to reach IPs directly (ECOVACS once did so) you may block those on a firewall-basis but everything depends on your needs, will and setup of course.

Even if this was true (it isn't, as this is once again ridiculous), the "environmental toxins" and the current parasites in the US will do their work anyway.

[–] oliver@lemmy.neuralwhisper.eu 5 points 2 days ago (4 children)

Good that there's Pi-hole or similar solutions. Have both LG and Samsung at home and if I see what Pi-hole drops and how talkative both vendor TVs are... bloody hell! Don't use the stock functions anyway, Apple TVs are doing there job here so I took them offline a while ago. Anyway, the whole industry is turning into a completely wrong direction...

 

Hey everyone,

as a longtime-Mac user who got used to the typical Mac-keyboard layout and using a Logitech MX Keys (Mac only) I was wondering if there is any chance of adopting the Mac-layout 1:1 on one of my favourite Linux-distros using KDE (desktop PC) without mapping each single key to match the Mac-key?

Is there any base tool I can use for this or any tool I can download to accomplish this?

Thanks in advance!

And so it begins...