I have it on an isolated laptop! And I don't care what happens to it! On Tue, Aug 4, 2020 at 2:54 PM Martin Steigerwald <mar...@lichtvoll.de> wrote:
> Ozi Traveller via Dng - 04.08.20, 06:00:43 CEST: > > Yes use the debian deb I have it running on devuan. > > > > or > > > > try the web client > > > > https://support.zoom.us/hc/en-us/articles/214629443-Zoom-web-client > > I'd avoid using the web client. > > At least with a browser that is not specifically set up to avoid privacy > leaks. > > I am not sure about the web client specifically, however the main webpage > from Zoom at least uses Google Tag Manager and Google Analytics. Both > blocked on my web browser. > > Of course as a user of Googlemail your mileage may vary. > > With my browser setup I cannot even set it up easily in order to fully > display the page as it seems to pull resources from not so obvious or > easy to guess sources. > > I'd be vary of the web client. > > On the other hand, if you use a secured browser and manage to make the > web client work with it, this *may* give you a better isolation than > using a Flatpak. > > If you install Zoom inside a VM just for that purpose or use a different > user, you may get the best protection though. > > I currently rely on the sandboxing in Flatpak, unless I learn that it > does not work. > > I also installed Rocket.Chat through Flatpak and there I was able that I > am not able to track files into the chat client from directories that are > *not* allowed for the app. Its error message was less than helpful, but > the app apparently was not able to open the file. So I found the > permission system basically appears to work. > > Best, > -- > Martin > > > _______________________________________________ > Dng mailing list > Dng@lists.dyne.org > https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng >
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