From http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/06/10/bernerslee_warns_of_spying
Speaking at the Decentralized Web Summit conference in San Francisco run by the Internet Archive, the engineer [Inventor of the World Wide Web, Sir Tim Berners-Lee] joined other internet notables including "father of the internet" Vint Cerf and Mozilla head Mitchell Baker in discussing how to strengthen the open internet as well as ensure its contents are retained over time.
"The web is already decentralized," Berners-Lee told attendees. "The problem is the dominance of one search engine, one social network, one Twitter for micro-blogging. We don't have a technology problem; we have a social problem."
[...] founder of the Internet Archive, Brewster Kahle: "Edward Snowden showed we've inadvertently built the world's largest surveillance network with the web. We have the ability to change all that."
The conference featured the developers of many tools that aim to retain the internet's decentralized nature, such as Blockstack, Ethereum, Interledger, IPFS and others.
It's not just the World Wide Web, it's the entire internet: your phone reports on your location at all times, apps on it flush contents of your phone to the owners of the app, almost all websites do some sort of tracking (most of them using Google Analytics), e-mail providers happily hand over anything to anyone asking, and the rest is vacuumed up automatically by the NSA.
So with that in mind: how are Soylentils protecting themselves online aside from the usual (i.e. not running javascript or 'use a VPN')?
(Score: 4, Insightful) by Phoenix666 on Monday June 13 2016, @04:27PM
One thing you will learn is that it's a ridiculous pain in the ass. As one of the oldest services on the Internet you'd think it would have become exceptionally easy, but it's the opposite. It's absurd how hard it is to set up your own email server and keep it secure.
Washington DC delenda est.
(Score: 3, Informative) by cockroach on Monday June 13 2016, @04:35PM
I recently did some experiments with OpenSMTP and so far it seems to be to Postfix what Postfix was to Sendmail, i.e. a whole lot less insane.
Might be worth a try if you think Postfix is a hard to setup / maintain.