Disconnect from FAANG, Connect to Free

25 Flundstrom2 15 6/5/2025, 7:00:10 PM frikopplad.nu ↗

Comments (15)

NitpickLawyer · 1d ago
> Keep your data under European jurisdiction, protected from foreign surveillance.

Ooof, I get what they're trying to say, but the irony of this line in light of the latest EU pushes towards having access to everything is glaring...

treetalker · 1d ago
A further irony is that, for US citizens, doing so has an increased likelihood of the federal government (through the NSA and FISA) having grounds to intercept, monitor, and store your data "legally" without a warrant (it claims).

<insert obvious but judicially ignored logic that FISA violates the letter and spirit of the Fourth Amendment>

Flundstrom2 · 23h ago
I guess Europeans are quite satisfied that US don't have jurisdiction in the EU.

Sure, GDPR isn't applicable against law enforcement, but it is a surprisingly strong public right. TM and robocalls? It didn't take long for all of that to cease after I simply started to ask for the name and contact information to the consumer privacy manager for the caller's employer and then whispering "GDPR" whenever I got an unsolicited phone call.

MaKey · 1d ago
TimTheTinker · 1d ago
Maybe I'm just not aware, but it seems to me like there's a big, potentially profitable market gap for home-hosted cloud services. Just like Oxide is providing companies on-premise cloud computing, people would really appreciate a plug-and-play way to disconnect from most online services and host them at home -- email, backup, media, chat/messaging, maybe even federated locally hosted Mastodon services.

I know it's possible with current products, but last I checked it is not at all easy for anyone without a lot of time and technical knowledge.

MaKey · 1d ago
This is a niche Synology used to cater to but seems to abandon more and more.
bokohut · 1d ago
Your sixth sense is accurate @TimTheTinker however it goes beyond just home for your awareness. This opportunity I see is below Oxide and targets any SMB that has data ownership and security for their business over time as an objective(+ many more). I am currently engaged in discussions with several niche businesses about building modular and extensible software specific to their industry needs of which the current industry software, written by non industry experts, doesn't support. Many business owners which contact me are disgusted in being fee'd to death so the opportunity to cut out those middlemen is massive and growing. Maybe this is your sixth sense tingle?
TimTheTinker · 1d ago
Yes, that absolutely jives with my sense. Targeting SMBs initially (since they'd have quantified cost savings involved), then expanding to home users in general after the product launches.

Ideally, an off-the-shelf machine (maybe from a few select hardware vendors/partners) with a very straightforward setup process, or an optional pre-installation.

I see data integrity as a key risk to address, though. Maybe something with a built-in Li-Ion battery (kept at 50% charge for longevity) that can keep running and safely shutdown in the event of a power blip, and an easy way to sync to rotating backups (i.e. plug in an external HDD once a week, or sync directly to another machine across the internet, no cloud in the middle). But IMO for most SMB-size work, RAIDs are overrated in the era of SSDs and modern filesystems.

lostmsu · 1d ago
That's what Sandstorm.io was (open source, barely maintained now, acquired by Cloudflare)
Sloppy · 1d ago
You need Google Translate to read it. <--- read with a high degree of irony.
kruuuder · 1d ago
Huh? There's a language menu at the top right.
krunck · 1d ago
No mention of ProtonMail?
shreddit · 1d ago
It gets mentioned if you click around the website
cycomanic · 1d ago
1it is mentioned. In the packages it says from Google to Proton mail.
valbaca · 1d ago
> From Gmail to Proton Mail / Tutanota