@durov They only way to know is by having open source software for the app and operating system (operating system included since these can potentially do key logging) that can be verified by you. Otherwise it's an opaque system. You will never know. You have to trust.
@twinnydotdev Thanks for this. It's great to have a functioning privacy focused VSCodium plugin that can run local models.
Could you setup a Discord server perhaps so we can chat with fellow users and you, the developers? It can also serve as a knowledge base about the product.
@twinnydotdev This looks great. Can you explain a little more about the transparent data sets? How are they gathered and used by others? Perhaps some example use cases.
@aboodman I think people are using trending frameworks to try to save time & effort. These frameworks are increasingly abstracting away underlying workings. With modern browsers you only need vanilla js, providing total control and understanding of what your app should/should not be doing.
@cryptocom@sgSMU @MelbBSchool Considered entering this, but the Terms & Conditions are totally one sided. I suggest participants read them to know what they are getting into before committing. https://t.co/8R9eO5uvGD
@ChrisBlec Argon2 hashing has configurable computation and memory complexity which can be progressively upped over time. Also using a pepper (stored outside the database) can eliminate brute force attacks in the case of database-only breaches.