Last edited by hitodev 07-07-19 at 04:07 AM. On the off chance, would there be a feature that would allow in "one-click" to disable all exchanges with Google services and that would enable them to reactivate, case by case if necessary? Or maybe I misunderstood the Blackberry philosophy? Is Blackberry's advertising on data security a pure scam in the best case? Or a trap in the worst case? In fact, I have never seen so much Google interconnectivity since I have my Key2. I'm wondering about the opportunity to interconnect so many services by default, some of which even offer to save user names and passwords to our greatest friends at all: Google. Really?īlackberry has a reputation for security and advertises on "privacy-oriented" devices. Obviously all of this for free and just for "convenience" and "smart usage". My first impression was astonishment when I noticed that many services and applications were connected to Google. I'd rather have proper access to features of my phone and just allow apps and connections responsibly on mobile data.I recently got my first Blackberry, a used Key2. Mobile data is spotty by definition, using any kind of VPN or DNS ad blocker only compounds the issue. Honestly I do not expect VPN to work well on mobile until wireguard is built in to the kernel and well established. Lockdown safari - use private browsing and lockdown the settings as much as suits your needs. Adguard has better blocking potential than FF but it also has more breakages so really the balance is a compromise based on your usage. Install decent content blockers for safari - I like firefox focus and https now at the moment. Delete any unecessary apps and restrict the worse-offenders (block mobile data access and check permissions). Vet apps with lockdown/guardian firewall/pihole to identify worst offenders. Select 'low data mode' in the cellular connection settings to block all background data on mobile connection (except push notifications). I almost do not bother with VPN on iOS at all anymore, keeping protonvpn handy only in case I might need to use wifi or to get past geo restrictions. sure we've had colder winters but that doesn't make it any warmer without gloves :/įor maximum usability and minimal compromise I have come to the following config: I apologise if ther is any typos it's -20 degrees celcius, I just got back inside, and I forgot my gloves. Then on the linux instance on the rpi or cloud comp, configure it to route its traffic through ProtonVPN (essentially letting you block tracking and ads at DNS level, avoid any malicious behaviour by your ISP, and insuring your output traffic from the pi hole server of choice is also encrypted) The final solution I'd have is running a Raspberry Pi (or your single board computer of choice) or a cheap cheap cheap cloud computer with "pi hole" and then configure a VPN connection wihtin iOS settings to connect to that. And the reason why I would pick NextDNS is it would allow you to block tracking / ads etc. I've never looked into it on my iPad Pro but I'd assume it works in theory? DoT + ProtonVPN worked fine on my android smartphone, so not sure about DoH + ProtonVPN. I'd see if you can run NextDNS (DoH) concurrently with Proton VPN?
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