As more people flock over to the fediverse from reddit, twitter and other centralised proprietary networks it is important that you keep your e-mail and other important accounts safe from hijacking attempts. Since anyone can simply spin up an instance and host users and communities it is important that you don’t divulge your internet personal details to anyone as these can be harvested by the instance owner and by any instance you erroneously try to login to or simply the instance could be hacked and the user data harvasted. With this in mind here are some suggestions for good OPSEC (Operation Security):

  • Don’t use your main e-mail address. Either create a new one or better sign up for an e-mail forwarding service and set-up forwarding addresses for each instance you sign up to. Since these are throw away addresses, if it gets leaked you can just delete the address and create a new one without compromising your main e-mail address. (Bonus: this can also be used to use unique addresses for traditional web services and make it easy to know how and from where an address got leaked)

Here is a nice article with some e-mail forwarding providers to get you started

  • Use a password manager and generate strong and unique passwords for any and all instances and services you use, this way you won’t divulge a password used on another account to the instance owner, or if the address used (especially if you used your main e-mail address)/got leaked your account will still be safe from hijacking by attempting to use password dictionaries to guess the password.

Some passvault suggestions:

  • Passbolt (self hosted)
  • Bitwarden (self hosted and hosted options)
  • Vaultwarden (unlocked self hosted alternative to bitwarden)

These are my main security suggestions for all you new and existing lemmings. Feel free to suggest other security considerations to have and other services beyond those mentioned. Stay safe and have fun posting and commenting.

  • dbx12@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    You could add keepassxc as an option for those who don’t want a hosted service at all. You can still exchange the storage file with other computers if you have to (via USB stick, mail, nextcloud etc)

    • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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      1 year ago

      I second this option. I use it because there’s an app that supports the file format for pretty much every platform.

      • Sentinian@lemmy.one
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        1 year ago

        My setup right here. I’d rather use my own tools to sync passwords instead of a cloud database

      • dbx12@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        Don’t forget that git is doing the archiving here ^^ And pass is great when your need to share a password store with someone. Just add their hog key and let them checkout the git repo

    • drone509@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 year ago

      I feel like this option is honestly worse for most people. You have the new security problem of having to transfer the file everywhere, but now the huge inconvenience of potentially losing it or not having it on a new device.

      • dbx12@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        I don’t think transferring the file is a security problem, with hosted services you need to transfer the secrets somehow as well. And cannot choose how they are synced and must rely on the server being secured (in case that component is not hosted by you). Since it is synced to all devices, you are basically having a distributed backup of it already. But I agree, initial setup is a slight bit more work.

    • Karlos_Cantana@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      Do you know of a “keepass for dummies”? I’ve tried to figure out how to use it, but reading the readme on GitHub just makes me feel like an idiot.

      • jae@reddthat.com
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        1 year ago

        Was there anything particularly confusing? I can try and clear it up.

        You can go on the KeePass downloads page and find a client that works for you. I like using Keepassium on my iPhone and KeePassXC on my laptop.

        • Karlos_Cantana@sopuli.xyz
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          1 year ago

          I finally figured it out. I’m using KeepassXD on Android and it’s not very user friendly. I still haven’t figured out what the unlabeled teardrops are that can be “enabled” or disabled.

  • humanreader@infosec.pub
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    1 year ago

    Speaking of which, stuff that frequently comes up in privacy related forums:

    Differentiate between your professional accounts (it has your real name attached) and your non-professional ones (you use it to discuss pooping methods for example). Don’t mix them up. I know many will say “so what if people in the fediverse know where I live and how I poop, I got nothing to hide” a lot, but that’s how people got doxxed or swatted.

    Even if you don’t feel the need to, it’s good to sit down and identify the potential threats given certain problems. Do you recycle passwords for email and social media accounts? What about banking? If a malicious coworker or an immature family member got access to your social media profile and posted reputation-damaging content, how bad can things get? Identify the outcomes you can mitigate or must prevent, and plan accordingly.

    There is no “100%” when it comes to privacy. It’s a process, not an “all-or-nothing” switch. Beginners often ask if “program X and Y will protect me 100%”, and the answer usually boils down to “there isn’t a single magic pill”.

    Privacy ≠ Security ≠ Anonymity. A VPN subscription can secure your connection (content secret in transit), but does not make you anonymous (sender known to middle node). You could leave an anonymous message (sender unknown) on a public forum, but the message itself isn’t private (content not secret). And so on.

    Encryption is a useful tool, but don’t fall for the “military grade encryption” speech. They often mean “we just slapped whatever shit it came up with”, nothing extraordinary.

    There are many more but I will stop for now. No, I am not in Guantanamo.

  • Deez@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    It’s not very open-sourcey, but Apple include a email forwarding service called Hide My Email in their iCloud+ plans. So, you may already have access to that service.

  • redcalcium@c.calciumlabs.com
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    Also, do not post personal information here ever. Once you posted a comment, there are no guarantee you can fully delete them later. If you post a personal information, there is a chance that it might still up in some instance somewhere even if you attempt to delete it. Some instance might not receive the activitypub push about the deletion due to federation issue/lags, getting blocked from the original instance, bugs or random internet connection issues. Use other channel if you need to share personal info to fellow lemmings so you can be sure to purge them if needed later (e.g a link to pastebin, discord, etc)

    • ShadowPouncer@kbin.social
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      If there are not already people running fediverse nodes that exist specifically to harvest potentially ‘interesting’ data, there will be.

      You edited it? That’s maybe interesting. You deleted it? Same deal, maybe interesting.

      It looks like an email address? Definitely might be interesting. A phone number? Yep.

      An address? Definitely could be interesting.

      If you posted it, assume that it will always be available to the exact people that you don’t want to see it.

    • CoderKat@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I wouldn’t say don’t post personal information at all. But rather don’t post information that you’re not comfortable with everyone knowing, while being identified and never being able to delete it.

      IMO it’s best to assume that if you post enough online, someone dedicated enough will be able to identify you, especially people who already know you in real life. It’s difficult to post without revealing small details about yourself that can be combined to piece together who you are. Eg, you might never say where you work, but your city, field, an offhand comment about a coworker, a mention of a conference, and such might let someone narrow it down. Similarly, you might never mention what city you’re in, but it might be narrowed down from mentions of things like traffic, weather, events near you, remarks of things being close by, etc. And that’s not even getting into devious things like trying to trick someone into clicking a link to a domain you control so that you can get their IP.

      I’m of the opinion you should generally act as if you’re talking to people face to face with a name tag saying your full name and address. I think that approach also just plain makes the internet a better place. Anonymity seems to make a lot of people more comfortable being aggressive assholes.

      I say “generally” because there’s plenty of valid reasons to want to post things you would want to post things that you’d never say if identified. But in that case, you should strongly consider using an absolutely minimal throwaway account, while being extremely careful with details. And even then, you should at least consider that you might still get identified. In particular, I think a lot of users of throwaways only consider strangers not being able to identify them. Sometimes that’s all you care about, but your family, friends, and coworkers are going to have a lot easier time identifying you.

  • didnt_readit@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I totally agree with using strong unique password manager generated passwords for every server (as everyone should do for every service they use regardless) but my email has been leaked so many times by so many breaches I’m not sure I really care about that part at this point…

      • ShadowPouncer@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I use + addresses for stuff.

        Well, since I run my own mail server, I tend to use _ instead of + as the separator, simply because more places will consider it a valid address.

        But it’s amazing how useful it is to include the name of whoever you’re giving the email address to in the email address. It lets you keep getting email for stuff like password recovery. And when an address is leaked, not only can you block that one, but you also get to know who leaked it.

        Which is awesome for knowing which businesses to never use again.

  • Trapping5341@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    When I made my account was the first time I used a Firefox relay account for more than just testing how it worked 😂 didn’t even think about the fact that fediverse instances are probably “less secure” or could even be outright malicious from the get. Been using bitwarden for about a year now and honestly I love it as well.

  • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@midwest.social
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    1 year ago

    Adding on (because I almost did this very, very stupid thing until I stopped and thought for a moment):

    If you create accounts on multiple instances with the same username, don’t use the same password. Otherwise anyone with access to one has access to all.

    • GunnarRunnar@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Passwords aren’t encrypted? Or you mean if an instance’s password leaks, they all leak? Because that applies to everything. Use unique passwords with every account, everywhere.

      • ShadowPouncer@kbin.social
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        The advice to always use a unique password per site is an excellent one.

        The why is multifaceted, and some of them are moderately complex.

        First off, not every site is going to be storing your password in a good a secure manner.

        In an ideal world, every site on the planet would be hashing it with something like bcrypt with a fairly aggressive cost setting, and good salts.

        And they would have a way to automatically rehash your password on login in the event that the password hashing settings change. (Almost everyone misses this one.)

        In practice… It could be stored in plain text. It could be hashed with classic crypt(), or with md5 or sha1 with no salt. There are so many ways to get it wrong.

        On the rehashing one, they could have picked something that was best practices at the time, you setup your account, and then two years later, best practices have changed, it turns out that there was a way to attack the previous way, so they change how they do it… And that’s great for everyone who changes their password or sets up a new account after that change, but everyone who did it before that change? Well, those passwords are just sitting there hashed by the old method indefinitely.

        Or someone could compromise the site, and grab every password everyone enters.

        Or you could fall prey to a phishing attack, and type your login to what looks exactly like the site in question, but is infact a common typo of the real domain.

        Again, there are a lot of ways for the password used on a site to get compromised. Many of those ways are entirely out of your control. It is standard practice for attackers to attempt to use that password and username / email on other services when this happens, just so that they can see what else they can get into.

        Don’t let that work.

      • dev@vlemmy.net
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        1 year ago

        I don’t have enough desire to check, but I’d assume they are encrypted AND salted so it’s not as easy as the top comment makes out.

        If an instance was hacked, the hackers would get a hash and a salt. They’d still have to figure out what plaintext password + salt = hash.

        use unique passwords with every account, everywhere.

        This is the way.

    • GVasco@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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      For real! In any case people should always be using unique passwords for any account on any service, but yeah this is definitely understated.

    • i_need_a_vacation@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      DDG is great, I’ve been using it for a while now, but I recently learned that I can also send mails from my main account as a @duck.com address and now I’m in love.

  • Big Duck Energy@partizle.com
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    1 year ago

    Weird question - if you change your email address, is the change you made, and the old and new email address now federated out to all the other instances, meaning in a hypothetical leak, both email addresses get leaked? Or would only the newest one be saved and federated, and therefore leaked?

    • drone509@discuss.tchncs.de
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      I do not believe either mastodon or lemmy federate your email address at all. Only the server you join has that information. You might have to worry if you have signed up to an uncrupulous instance. That instance admin could sell your email, I guess. They would have access to any email you gave them, so changing it would probably not help. I think the problem is a little overstated, honestly.

    • person@fenbushi.site
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      1 year ago

      federated users and local users are stored in the database in different tables. The federated users table doesn’t have emails saved in it.

    • woodnote@lemm.ee
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      My question as well! Since I didn’t know this at signup and used my primary email, am I screwed no matter what in the event of unscrupulous data collection?

      • CoderKat@lemm.ee
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        Well, it does mean that you could be doxxed if a leak or attack happens. It’s up to you to decide how much you care about that risk.

        Though also bear in mind that you can be doxxed no matter what if you share enough details online, so unless you’re planning to be extremely careful with every shred of information you reveal, it probably honestly doesn’t matter.

  • buco@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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    1 year ago

    You could also use an instance that doesn’t require email for signups. Like fmhy or lemmynsfw.

      • buco@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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        Fmhy requires you to write a sentence with a certain number in it and use manual approval of accounts. I don’t know about lemmynsfw.

      • BlueÆther@no.lastname.nz
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        1 year ago

        Captcha or signup questions/response.

        I think I only had about 10 bots sign up on my instance - caught the beginning of the wave before it kicked off

    • GunnarRunnar@kbin.social
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      Or you could use a temporary email service, though I’m not sure what the services do with the temporary addresses after they expire. If someone knows, please enlighten me.

  • Drunemeton@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Caution: The following requires that you have “Keychain” and “iCloud Mail” activated for your Apple ID, and are running iOS 15+, iPadOS 15+, and macOS Monterey+ on the applicable devices.

    For macOS / iOS / iPadOS users you can use “Hide My Email” (aka “Sign in with Apple”) to have a randomly generated e-mail address used for sign-ups. Then you can have Keychain generate a random, strong, passcode for you to use on that particular website.

    Note: If you see just an “e-mail” field on the sign-up page, and when you click in it you see a drop-down menu of your current Apple e-mail addresses, just scroll to the bottom of that list to get to “Hide My E-mail”.

    After you’ve completed a sign-up on a website (not just federated, but any website) Apple will e-mail you the new e-mail address you generated and for which website is was used on. Store that in a safe place to easily keep track of what’s being used where. (You can also find them here: System > Apple ID > Hide My E-mail > Options…)

    All of the above, the randomly generated e-mail addresses and passcodes for the websites, are automatically synced through iCloud to all of your devices signed into the account used to create them.

    Note: The “Sign in with Apple” button is a bit weird. When you’ve used it on a website, then later go back and are asked to sign-in to your account, you’ll see the same “Sign in with Apple” button you saw originally. There’s no visual indicator on the page that you’ve used this feature before. It’s not until you select the button that the next screen will show you the e-mail address that was generated.

    • Kuroshi@lemmy.ramble.moe
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      This is a good explanation of the feature for use with Lemmy.

      I’m gonna be an annoying pedant for a second though and say that “hide my email” and “sign in with apple” are two different and unique features, though they both act as an email relay.

      The former just creates a semi-random email address for you that forwards to your email. This address will end in “@icloud.com,” making it indistinguishable from any other iCloud email address (other than the ridiculous address you get).

      The latter is an authentication system that allows you to sign up for services that support it with your apple account. The service doesn’t get your password directly of course, when you click the “sign in with apple” button it will redirect you to an apple sign in, typically faceID or touchID, and when you sign in successfully (or are already signed in to Apple) it will redirect back to the service with a token that says “this person is cool.”

      Importantly for this conversation though, you can optionally send the service your real email or a generated email address as a relay, but the generated email is not the same as the email generated by “Hide my email,” instead it’s a clearly random series of characters and ends in “@privaterelay.appleid.com”.

      In the end they have roughly the same purpose for your email, but the important bit here is that on Lemmy, only “hide my email” will be useful. There are no Lemmy instances that support “sign in with Apple” (yet).

      Okay, I’ll stop being a pedant now. Sorry for being annoying there.

  • discodoubloon@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Ha ok this is fun. I do like this idea for most people. You should sign up with as little information as you need. You still must watch what you say.

    I do also think you should have a federated business server before you start posting with your real name/loc

  • axzxc1236@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Or get yourself your own domain name, and use a email service provider that can forward all emails of the domain name to one account.

    • GVasco@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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      For sure! Just with how the fediverse is composed this I found that this kind of advice now more than ever is incredibly important!

    • ShadowPouncer@kbin.social
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      Don’t do this.

      Just use a good, random, password generator with decent settings.

      Varying away from that just to ‘change the kind of password’ is only going to reduce your security.

      You want as many random bits of information as possible in the password. That’s it.

        • ShadowPouncer@kbin.social
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          That’s like saying that only using high security locks with various security pins in them to protect your house is a bad idea, and you should throw in some secured with padlocks too just to change things up.

          And if some of them are shitty masterlocks, well, you’re changing things up.

          That’s really not how security works.

          Yes, pass phrases can have large amounts of entropy attached. But unless you are picking your pass phrases truly randomly, with a large dictionary, and using unique pass phrases per site, and the sites are not silently truncating the password input (such as bcrypt which truncates to 72 bytes), you are not actually getting that large amount of entropy.

          Where as a 16 character password that randomly uses the ASCII printable range, excluding spaces, gives you 93^16 possible combinations. That’s 31313180170800116587336013460801 passwords.

          Or, very roughly, 104.6 bits of entropy. (104.6265409777285022441578006899739 bits of entropy if you want to be downright absurd about it.)

          Knowing that you’re doing that simply doesn’t help the attacker in any meaningful way.

          Bumping that to 20 characters gives you over 130 bits of entropy, or 2342388736625917052139104541473924426001 possible combinations.

          This is quite simply not a viable attack surface.

          Where as saying ‘use pass phrases for some things’ means that it is quite likely that some of your pass phrases are going to be much less secure than this.

          But let’s give the same numbers for properly generated random passphrases.

          The xkcdpass utility can help us here.

          Even picking entirely randomly, out of a large word list of 7227 words, a 6 word pass phrase only gives roughly 76 bits of entropy.

          Going up to 8 words gives us roughly 102 bits of entropy, that helps a ton… Except that some of those passphrases are going to be longer than 72 bytes. So you’re almost certainly losing bits of entropy.

          That best case still gives you fewer bits of entropy than a 20 character randomly generated password. Unless you’re trying to memorize your password, there are no benefits to alternating between randomly generated passwords with good generation settings and passphrases.

          And if you’re trying to memorize your passwords, you are definitely doing it wrong.