I trusted them for years. But, imo, if your rooting your device what your looking for is more functionality and not more safety.
I trusted them for years. But, imo, if your rooting your device what your looking for is more functionality and not more safety.
I see you, friend.
Started with self hosting Vaultwarden
Moved onto an annual family subscription to Bitwarden
Today I learned what a lolicon was, and yikes indeed.
So, like with a lot of things it depends on your risk tolerance. If you have Android and don’t take steps to keep Google from your location, the only extra thing your giving Google with Fitbit is your heart rate, activity level, weight, and menstrual cycle (if applicable). They’ll (probably) sell this information in bulk to advertisers so they can link your advertisement ID to ads relevant to you, like ads for stationary bikes or whatever.
When faced with this problem what I said to myself was, “I can’t selfhost and build a fitness tracker. So some company is going to get my info. I’ll break it up as much as I can.” I use Garmin.
Garmin watches are a quality product. I’m fond of the ones with eink displays so I don’t have to charge the but once a month. Garmin has my health info. Proton has my emails. Google has my calendar events (Google calendar has no reasonable replacement imo.)
I know you didn’t ask for other product recommendations. But all of this is a long winded way of saying the danger is letting one company have all your information.
Companies and governments will always know something about you, unless you live on the the moon. The important thing is keeping track of who knows what and if one company begins to know an unreasonable amount (looking at you Google), then start cutting off that company.
Lastly, consider your political climate. If I’m a woman in Texas I’m likely not going to let any company know when my last period was.
I have terrible distro ideas. I rock kubuntu or Fedora for basic server stuff. So I’d recommend dual booting Ubuntu or Kubuntu just cuz it’s easy and you already have experince with it.
Mostly what I wanted to convey was a sense of excitement for you! No matter what option you end up doing there’s so much to learn here. I remember when I was a very young lad learning how windows 95/98 worked. The jank.
FOSS Linux has that kinda jank. The unpolished functionality of OS’ long forgotten. Idk. Makes me feel like a kid again.
I’m excited for you. Lmk what you end up doing, if you remember. Buying a laptop or dual booting or whatnot.