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Looking for thoughts and recommandations on hardware wallets with FIDO/U2F(reddit.com)
Hi everyone, as the title implies, i am looking for thoughts, recommandations and opinions on using hardware wallets as FIDO/U2F tokens (as well as PGP tokens if possible) from people who used or are using these options. I'm specifically looking for one with these options as i need both FIDO/U2F + PGP and a hardware wallet (for different purposes but i wouldn't mind reducing the cost even if it means my PGP keys are less secure than on 2x 70€ yubikeys which have no crypto usage) As for cryptos, i mostly own SOL and XMR which seems to be both supported by most hardware wallets so probably not an issue. For now, i've seen than both Trezor and Ledger are solid options with these capabilities, but i'd like to get opinions on the options i'm looking for on both of them Thanks for helping :D submitted by /u/1_ane_onyme [link] [Kommentare]
Beyond the $7.4B Headline: DeepSeek's Series A signals Chinese AI alliance shift(unsplash.com)
This week: DeepSeek Raises $7.4 Billion in Historic Series A: Tencent Leads, CATL Crosses Over, Alibaba and ByteDance Sit Out · AI's Dual Edge: Regulation and Risk Escalate Globally · Zhipu AI Challenges Western AI Dominance, Tops Design Benchmark · POLYN Technology Targets Sensor-level AI Processing for Ultra-low-power Edge Intelligence
Pondering routing more of my traffic via nodes outside the UK(bssg.dragas.net)
Pondering routing more of my traffic via nodes outside the UK because of the direction of UK online safety policy Published on: 2026-06-20 21:00:07 by Neil Brown Some of the UK government’s policy announcements around the Internet - and, in particular, social media and VPNs - are downright concerning me at the moment. In the name of “online safety”, the fundamental rights of both freedom of expression and privacy appear to be under imminent threat. I have concerns which go beyond our shores - mostly stemming from Google, frankly - but the UK legislative / policy issues are bothering me especially at the moment. I value my ability to read, learn, and communicate almost without borders. I don’t like signing up to websites or newsletters (I prefer RSS), I don’t like storing my data on other people’s computers, and I’ve certainly no wish to prove my age or identity outside core government services. The current proposal to ban people under 16 - who also have the rights to freedom of expression and privacy - from some (as yet not fully delineated) social media services is likely to result in wide-spread verification. While I am unlikely to be affected directly - although it would depend on the definition of “social media” - I anticipate that more websites will simply choose to block traffic from UK IP addresses, especially if UK-originated traffic does not matter a huge amount to them. I am already seeing this as a consequence of the Online Safety Act, and I expect any future UK laws in this area to exacerbate that. I also anticipate that we will soon see the first court-ordered blocking injunctions under the Online Safety Act, when the fines issued by Ofcom against some website providers (so far, most quite niche porn sites, as far as I can tell, plus a “suicide discussion forum”) go unpaid and the “compliance issues” which Ofcom has identified go unresolved. Some - many - UK ISPs have already implemented, and carry out, DNS blocking, both for mandatory and non-mandatory reasons. Mine - A&A - is probably one of the outliers, with no blocking save for the mandatory sanctions-related requirements. In any case, so far, since I run my own recursive DNS infrastructure, I have not been affected. I use Tor quite a lot, but I’ve seen an increase - sure, a small increase, but an increase nevertheless - of sites which are blocking Tor traffic. And so, for the first time, I am considering locating something (perhaps a WireGuard node, or a SOCKS proxy, or a recursive DNS server / DNS proxy, or perhaps all of them) somewhere on the Internet outside the UK, so that I can route some traffic through that, as needed, to maintain my access to the web. Honestly, it seems such a shame to me, that UK Internet censorship should reach such a place, but there we go. I have not decided exactly what I might do, or exactly how, or where, I might do it, but it is far more attractive to me now that it has been ever before, in all the 30ish years that I’ve been online. To me, the need to even contemplate this kind of thing is the stuff of dystopian sci-fi. And yet here I find myself. Internet online safety UK regulation Tor SOCKS WireGuard proxy Online Safety Act Related Posts Preparatory notes for upcoming Online Safety Act workshops Public safety by design: the catchphrase for Internet policy debate in 2022? Just let me compute in peace