0 Followers
0 Following
1 Posts
Deal 🤝
Collossal Cave Adventure is a text-only adventure game. It uses the mist primitive technologies in the most primitive ways (as it’s old, but it’s free and even has a web version as it’s old).

Signal’s server is open-source. Of course, they could do something else in secret, but the openness of the client (here’s the client) is enough to verify that E2EE exists.

Your phone number alone just doesn’t give any real insight: you can derive that the person behind it prefers to communicate in private and that they’re probably alive, but that’s about it. Also, I don’t think Signal can get your name without a government to look it up. That does happen sometimes, it’s just that nothing importmant ever comes out of it.

GitHub - signalapp/Signal-Server: Server supporting the Signal Private Messenger applications on Android, Desktop, and iOS

Server supporting the Signal Private Messenger applications on Android, Desktop, and iOS - signalapp/Signal-Server

GitHub

Signal is free and open-source. It cannot be denied that basically everything, including minor details like usernames, is end-to-end encrypted and kept secure. The Signal protocol has been proven to be secure by many independent experts and thus it is mathematically impossible for Signal to gain access to your sensitive information (except for your phone number, obviously).

A phone number alone just won’t do much.

Wait, it can do that? Despite the kernel level anticheat?
If all you want to do is fly a helicopter, try Flightgear. It’s probably nothing like BF 2042 though. FlightGear is a flight simulator with focus on realism (physics wise) while Battlefield probably oversimplifies this by a lot.
Add admin:// in Dolphin (so /etc/sudoers.conf.d/ turns into admin:///etc/sudoers.conf.d/)
For autologin, you’ll need to make configuration changes to your display manager, GDM. Here’s how. I’m not 100% sure if you can just edit this file as root (since Bazzite is atomic) - just try it.
Configure automatic login

Reminder that Edge for Linux exists.

Did you actually run it?

In this case, I hope you had a backup. Boot a live system to see if there’s anything left. Back that up, then reinstall.