The Privacy, Security, & OSINT Show – Episode 268

EPISODE 268-CCW Permits, UNREDACTED 003, & Linux Questions

This week I discuss the California CCW leak, release the latest issue of UNREDACTED Magazine, and answer several listeners' Linux questions.

Direct support for this podcast comes from our privacy services, online training, and new books for 2022: Extreme Privacy (4th Edition) and  Open Source Intelligence Techniques (9th Edition). More details can be found at IntelTechniques.com. Thank you for keeping this show ad-free and sponsor-free.


SHOW NOTES:

INTRO:

None

NEWS & UPDATES:

California Firearms Dashboard Portal
https://inteltechniques.com/osintbook9
https://unredactedmagazine.com/
https://inteltechniques.com/blog/2022/06/29/snap-to-flatpak-on-ubuntu/

LINUX QUESTIONS:

Discussion


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Snap to Flatpak on Ubuntu

Within recent podcasts and magazine articles, I explained my transition from Ubuntu to Pop!_OS. During this time, I stated that one could manually modify Ubuntu to replicate many of the benefits of Pop!_OS, but I did not offer any specific steps. Since then, many diehard Ubuntu users have contacted me requesting explicit details about these statements.

First, there is nothing wrong with Ubuntu. I just don't like some of the latest features. One of these is the use of Snap for the application store, Firefox, and other default apps. In fact, if you try to install some applications with traditional APT commands, Ubuntu modifies your commands and installs the Snap versions. No thanks. I prefer Flatpak as my package manager, which I find to be much cleaner and faster.

The following command will display all installed snap applications:

snap list

This presents the following within a new Ubuntu 22.04 install:

The following command would remove Firefox:

sudo snap remove --purge firefox

I could repeat this process to delete each of the removable entries, including the software store:

sudo snap remove --purge gnome-3-38-2004
sudo snap remove --purge snap-store
sudo snap remove --purge gtk-common-themes

I can now remove the Snap cache with the following:

sudo rm -rf /var/cache/snapd/

Finally, I can remove Snap with the following commands:

sudo apt autoremove --purge snapd gnome-software-plugin-snap -y
rm -fr ~/snap

I prefer to go one step further with the following command, which prevents any attempt to install an application with Snap by default:

sudo apt-mark hold snapd

I am now ready to install Flatpak and the application store with the following commands:

sudo apt install flatpak -y
sudo apt install gnome-software-plugin-flatpak -y
flatpak remote-add --if-not-exists flathub https://flathub.org/repo/flathub.flatpakrepo

Restarting my machine presents the Flatpak store:

 

The Privacy, Security, & OSINT Show – Episode 267

EPISODE 267-macOS Privacy & Security Revisited

This week, after a lot of talk about Linux, I revisit privacy and security considerations for macOS machines.

Direct support for this podcast comes from our privacy services, online training, and new books for 2022: Extreme Privacy (4th Edition) and  Open Source Intelligence Techniques (9th Edition). More details can be found at IntelTechniques.com. Thank you for keeping this show ad-free and sponsor-free.


SHOW NOTES:

INTRO:

Tim Conway Jr.

MACOS PRIVACY & SECURITY REVISITED:

Secure Boot
Firmware password
Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP)
System Integrity Protection (SIP)
Approved App Downloads
Telemetry
iCloud push
Little Snitch
Considerations

Linux Q&A


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The Privacy, Security, & OSINT Show – Episode 266

EPISODE 266-The Sole Proprietorship

This week, I explain the privacy benefits of a sole proprietorship with corresponding EIN.

Direct support for this podcast comes from our privacy services, online training, and new books for 2022: Extreme Privacy (4th Edition) and  Open Source Intelligence Techniques (9th Edition). More details can be found at IntelTechniques.com. Thank you for keeping this show ad-free and sponsor-free.


SHOW NOTES:

INTRO:

My Week

THE SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP:

Business purpose
Privacy purpose
Hurdles
Taxes
Aged DBAs
Banking
Linux Listener Questions


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