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145 lines
7.7 KiB
Plaintext
145 lines
7.7 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1434
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Title: HPR1434: Why I made an account free android
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1434/hpr1434.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 02:16:04
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---
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.
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Hello all.
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This is my first episode for HPR.
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Been lurking and listening for a while, but if not felt I had something to contribute
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till now.
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I am Toja.
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My real name is James.
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Toja is a handle I've used online for quite some time that started as a joke, but sort
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of stuck.
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There are all sorts of issues concerning privacy right now that have been discussed lately.
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There have been many discussions on how to reduce your digital footprint.
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We've become so tied into advertisements and free services we often fail to see what
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it truly cost ourselves.
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These companies are truly offering a fabulous, gilded cage.
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It concerns me that we so often give up controls of ourselves and information for things.
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I've been concerned about privacy for a while, been trying to figure out how to extricate
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myself from the control of others.
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When Google was first growing, I was excited to see someone trying to wrestle control of
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the computer room from Microsoft.
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With its current size and scope, have we just traded one master for another?
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No, I'm not saying these companies are evil or anything like that.
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They're companies.
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They exist to make a profit for their owners.
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They offer nice services, but it comes at a price.
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Office is more direct and charging you for just about everything.
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Google does the same in free services that are ad supported.
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Both offer easy ways into their realm.
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And just about every other side I go to, wants me to sign up for an account and provide
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all sorts of personal information.
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Don't get me started on Facebook.
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Now you may think I'm a person who wants to unplug, fall into a hole and forget the
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world.
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Far from it.
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I like communications and the interactions that can be done with technology.
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In seconds, I can communicate with someone anywhere on the planet.
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I can find out what's going on just about any place.
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But my question is, who controls all that, or at least the parts that I'm putting into
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the system?
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Several years ago, I had switched to Linux for my primary iOS.
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So I figured I could probably find some solutions that would work.
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I was also getting tired of services that I regularly shut down.
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I had loved Google Readers, then it got shut down.
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Google Talk lost its XMPP support.
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Google Voice is changing its services this year, which is going to cut out a lot of the
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free calling services.
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My Yahoo got a revamp.
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It didn't quite like the changes.
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And then the constant changes with services that they do continue drives me bonkers.
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If you look at Gmail or Yahoo from two years ago, and today, it's entirely different.
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Well, last year, I decided to start reducing my dependency on ad-supported services.
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I would look at what I did online and then try to find some alternatives, either paid
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or self-hosted.
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I'm not trying to do anything illegal.
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I just want to know who is tracking me and how.
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My first obvious choice is to do something with email.
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I had more than a dozen different email accounts that I checked regularly.
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I dropped most of those.
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I had consolidated to two accounts that I had had for quite a long time.
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My Gmail, my Yahoo accounts.
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Both are heavily ad-supported.
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But I had a hosting plan for a personal website that included an email server.
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This includes webmail, server connections, and no ads for the stuff that I'm doing.
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After all, I'm paying for it.
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After setting up forwards for all the emails to the new address, I purely am giving out
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my personal one now.
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If I don't get too many people screaming at me about this episode, I might detail how
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I went ahead and forwarded those.
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The next thing I dealt with was my social footprint.
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I realized that most, not all the people that I deal with on those social services were
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not really adding much to me.
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Yes, I sort of liked seeing what they were doing, but all in all, I was spending a lot
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of time looking at things that I really didn't need to.
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I ended up blocking down my privacy on Facebook, and I checked it once in a blue moon because
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there are a few people that's the only way I communicate with them.
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Ditto for Google+.
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Besides, I prefer face-to-face anyway.
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Next I decided that having all my contacts and calendars in the cloud on an advertised
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in-server was probably not a good thing.
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I saw a season drop box to share files remotely, and there are some limitations with that.
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But then along comes own cloud.
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After looking at it, after several versions of own cloud and experiments with different
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servers, I finally have a stable home solution, accessible from anywhere, due to some scripting
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and DNS from my hosting provider.
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That sounds like it might become another 8HPR episode.
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So now I have male contacts, calendars, and file sharing under my control.
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All is good, or so I thought.
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I realize my tablet is a major source of tracking.
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The device is tied to tons of Google's products.
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I have ads from tons of apps that are installed.
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Most apps have additional accounts that had to be set up to identify me.
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My communications with Google Voice was tracking me, and Gmail was doing the same.
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So this time I decided to do something different.
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My daughter had gotten a new tablet for Christmas.
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She gave me her old one.
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Nice thing for her getting an upgrade, right?
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It's not bad.
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It was an Android 4.0 tablet.
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It's got Google plays, and it's tied into tons of stuff.
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Immediately I thought of rooting it, but then I had a different idea.
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For work related reasons, I cannot root a device and have it access company resources.
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Many other people are in the same position.
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Could I possibly de-googleify the device without creating an account tied into advertising?
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Could I get enough reputable apps to make this a useful device?
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Can I document and make the process simple enough that I can give the instructions to
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an average person to use?
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I came up with some basic criteria.
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No accounts created for downloading, installing, or configuring, except for the mail account.
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No rooting, no pirated apps, want to say legal on this.
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Something that can be easy for an user to do that includes installing and updating the
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apps.
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I mean, I've seen tons of these solutions, but some of them you have to be pretty advanced
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to be able to support them.
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For the most part, I think I succeeded on my test.
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You can find my attempt at http.com slash slash james.tobusacademy.com forward slash account
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underscore free underscore android underscore device dot html.
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The link should be in the show notes.
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Now I did have one ad supported app to install, but I'm hoping to find an alternative.
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So if you have a suggestion, email me.
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I would be interested in hearing about your attempts to do the same thing.
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My website is james.tobusacademy.com and my email is james.tobusacademy.com.
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I would think that many of you are interested in trying to protect your privacy and controlling
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your footprint while still being able to reach out in the world.
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Let me know what ideas you have and what kind of updates you can suggest to this.
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Thanks and have fun.
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