Migrating to the EU (rz01.org)

718 points by exitnode 9 hours ago

jwr an hour ago

I can recommend:

* Hetzner.de for servers (I've been using their physical servers for many years now, incredible performance per € spent)

* Fernand as your CRM, it's smooth and nice and so much better and faster than all the zendesks and freshdesks it's not even funny. (https://getfernand.com/)

* AISLER if you design electronics and need to make PCBs (https://aisler.net/)

dinowars 8 hours ago

> First, I tried mailbox.org, which I can generally recommend without reservation. Unfortunately, you can’t send emails from any address on your own domain without a workaround

I use mailbox for a long time, one account for 2.50EUR/month with multiple custom domains and I can send emails from any address. To send from a different address the process didn't really seem different than other providers.

From Thunderbird mobile on Android I just add a new sender identity. If I need to send from webmail, similarly I just add a new alternative sender. Are these the workarounds you mentioned?

shelled 2 hours ago

I wish they had retained one awesome Thunderbird desktop feature on mobile as well - being able to set the "from" address on the go while composing the email, without having to add an identity/sender-mail in advance. Alas, it seems that hasn't been the case.

akvadrako 6 hours ago

I use mailbox for the past few years and I think it's the best option out there. But they have one major issue, which is that anyone can impersonate your domain:

https://userforum-en.mailbox.org/topic/anti-spoofing-for-cus...

okanat 2 hours ago

I think that is not up to date. Mailbox publishes DKIM records: https://kb.mailbox.org/en/private/custom-domains/spf-dkim-an...

SPF is here https://kb.mailbox.org/en/private/custom-domains/spf-dkim-an...

DMARC is up to the domain owner to set.

solstice 5 hours ago

Oof, what a drag

mentalgear 6 hours ago

Have been using mailbox.org with a custom domain (including catch-all wildcard) for the last 5 years or so, so it's definitely possible and as far I remember quite straightforward.

layer8 7 hours ago

My understanding is that the number of such sender aliases is limited, at most 50 or 250, depending on the plan. There are ways to use a custom domain for sending where you end up using a larger number of localparts fairly quickly, and it would be a hassle to have to manage them, instead of just typing whatever sender you want (or on replies, having the email client automatically use the address from the original email, without having to worry whether it’s still in the set of registered aliases).

tpetry 6 hours ago

When you have a custom domain you can list @mydomain.com as sending domain allowing you every string before the at character. So that means you could use 50 different domains with infinite adresses on these domains.

v20 7 hours ago

The limit is only enforced in the web interface. You can send from any alias using any third party email client, and on the website you can configure a catchall mailbox and create a rule to filter out the aliases that receive spam.

tomgag 4 hours ago

Can confirm, I use mailbox.org with my own domain and can send from any *@mydomain

subzero06 5 hours ago

Yea been using mailbox.org for couple months and i can send from any address of my own domain...this is bad article. He probably doesn't know how to.

patapong 7 hours ago

Hmmm this looks like a really nice option! Any issues with deliverability?

AndyMcConachie 7 hours ago

I also use mailbox.org and use my own domain for email. Not sure what issue the author ran into.

MPSimmons 4 hours ago

SPF or DKIM maybe?

okanat 2 hours ago

scrollop 6 hours ago

Works for me as well.

dragochat 8 hours ago

...also migrating AWAY from Fastmail (Australian) and TO an European provider sounds like a very bad idea - I'd kind of want both the US and the EU legally away from my coms at all costs (!)

severino 7 hours ago

Is it that different? Being Australia in alliances like "Five Eyes" I don't think you can keep your stuff away from the US at least when using Fastmail.

If you want both US & EU away from your data, I suppose you will have to consider things like Yandex Mail, which comes with its own set of problems too, of course :)

atmosx 7 hours ago

sakisv 7 hours ago

While I agree in principle, I have to remind you (and to myself) that Australia is part of the Five Eyes: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_Eyes

kioleanu 7 hours ago

johannes1234321 7 hours ago

As EU citizen I at least got some influence into EU policy. A government far away doesn't even have to pretend to care about me.

verisimi 6 hours ago

icfly2 7 hours ago

Fastmail runs exclusively of AWS in the US.

I looked into this, there are lots of people in forums discussing/ asking for EU based servers.

deaux 8 hours ago

https://bunny.net/ seems solid as a Cloudflare and S3 replacement. I'm not affiliated but they deserve more mentions in these threads.

christophilus 8 hours ago

Used them in my last project for around 5 years. They were boring in a good way and inexpensive.

recroad 7 hours ago

I use them too. Highly recommend. Have never had an issue with them.

spiderfarmer 3 hours ago

Hetzner and Bunny are solid choices for EU projects.

_pdp_ 8 hours ago

Our company started migrating our tech stack from USA to EU. We are about 90% there with a few small dependencies that could be resolved but we have not yet tackled.

flowerthoughts 7 hours ago

Could you summarize the easy and hard aspects? Have you had any unexpected benefits or downsides?

spiderfarmer 3 hours ago

For me:

- SES was a big one. There was no affordable alternative at my (not big, not small) scale.

- I'm still waning myself personally of GMail. That dependency took decades to build and it will take years for all ties to sever.

darthcloud 6 hours ago

As a Canadian, I’ve been thinking since last year about migrating to non-US services and applications.

My main goal is simply to avoid giving money or data directly to US corporations. I have no illusions, these non-US services probably still benefit US companies in some ways.

They’re rare, but I’ve consciously decided to stay away from some Canadian alternatives. The main customers of most Canadian tech companies are in the US, and I feel they would happily move there if needed.

I started with this:

Gmail / Drive → Proton Mail / Drive

NameCheap / GoDaddy → Infomaniak

Google Maps → TomTom

Google Chrome → Vivaldi

Google Search → Startpage (Vivaldi default)

GitHub → Codeberg & Codefloe (for private)

I do like Proton Mail. The main thing I hate is how often the app and web versions get out of sync for read and archive states.

I’m really happy with Infomaniak, migrating all my domains was a breeze.

Vivaldi is based on the Chrome codebase, but I really love all the extra customization options. It was a very easy switch.

Startpage took me some time to get used to. It’s not as good as Google, but whatever.

TomTom isn’t great, but it’s not like Maps has been great over the last few years either.

Forgejo is much better than what GitHub has become.

Next, I’m thinking of moving away from Google Photos. I’m considering pCloud for that.

gattilorenz 42 minutes ago

To you people who moved email to a different provider… how did you do that, practically? Email signature, reply from another address and hope your contacts pick it up, or something else? How well did it work?

I have been a user of gmail since you needed an invitation to register, and even though I have felt for years the pressure to de-google myself, I find it a daunting task due to the amount of people/services that think my email account is gmail, and forever will be.

Aachen 11 minutes ago

When first migrating away from Hotmail as a teenager, I just registered for new accounts/contracts on my own domain and migrated only the stuff I was still actively using

At some point I downloaded the emails from Hotmail by adding the account to Thunderbird and copying the contents to a local folder. Probably imapsync or some other dedicated tool would be more reliable but it seems to have worked for me (don't forget to also copy the sent folder). I don't really look back at it anymore, after a few years nothing of interest lands there. It's still out there though. Data hoarder issues with definitively deleting the data from it

I'd keep the account name just in case someone finds that it can be re-registered and used to gain access via password reset somewhere

jagermo 29 minutes ago

If you use their domain, its a paint and you need to do the steps you mention. If you have your own domain for emails, its basically a line in the dns settings and your emails go to the new provider. Everyone should own their E-Mail domain

philwelch 18 minutes ago

This is a lot simpler if you own a personal domain name. You’re still going to have pain setting that up the first time, but afterwards any future migrations will be much easier.

detectivestory 5 hours ago

I've moved to pCloud for photos and I've found it to be a good alternative. One frustrating thing is that if you are cycling through your photos on the default pcloud app, they are usually slow to render which can be frustrating. Playing music on the app is also a little frustrating. It works, but it it's not an amazing UX. Other than that I am completely content with pCloud though, and I would recommend it.

One other thing to be made aware of is that the macOS ecosystem seems to be a little hostile towards pCloud and it seems to be fighting a never ending battle in order to the get the remote drive functioning reliably there. It works, but it can be a little annoying at times.

mft_ 24 minutes ago

> the macOS ecosystem seems to be a little hostile towards pCloud and it seems to be fighting a never ending battle in order to the get the remote drive functioning reliably there

pCloud seems to have been having a few wobbles in the past few months, and it's unclear to me whether the root cause is external or internal. Two different Windows machines both needed manual removal and reinstallation, and the Mac installation needed manually updating to a later version due to (apparently) an SSL certificate renewal. FWIW the current version on my Mac (on Sequoia) seems solid outside of rarely needing to select 'Enable Drive' from the menu.

CIARobotFish 3 hours ago

I've more or less made a similar migration towards non-US alternatives for most of my services. In my case, I switched from GitHub to Worktree (https://worktree.ca/).

awongh 3 hours ago

I'm still waiting and hoping that open street map becomes a viable alternative to google maps- it would be great to get a firefox of mapping (maybe not the best analogy, but....)

I definitely know that an open mapping solution could gain traction and be supported by bigger companies that would use it. It seems like a good candidate for the kind of collective OSS work that supports other projects- that there are enough big-enough companies out there that want an open non-google reliant mapping solution that are willing to pool resources.

I know that with mapbox and others that active work is being done, but it just doesn't quite seem like it's there yet.

patmorgan23 3 hours ago

Lyft pays people to help map in OSM. meta and Microsoft have both made big contributions as well (like allowing the use of Bing imagery)

chucksmash 3 hours ago

arielcostas 3 hours ago

What do you miss about Google Maps in OSM? Just business information (schedules, contact info, reviews...), or something else?

snowpid 3 hours ago

mentalgear 6 hours ago

For Photos, consider Ente (e2ee).

Instead of Startpage, try DDG (DuckDuckGo) - been using it now for several years instead of Google as I found no difference in search quality.

wccrawford 6 hours ago

Their whole point was to avoid US companies.

dv_dt 4 hours ago

Consider ecosia for search. It's not perfect but is decent for most general searches

commandlinefan 5 hours ago

> avoid giving money

You're paying for any of these?

hedora 5 hours ago

Most of those services are paid by terrible people when you use them.

Look at their revenue breakdowns.

dzjkb 3 hours ago

I've recently moved my storage to Jottacloud (Norway), highly recommend - they do - gdrive style storage - dropbox style synced folders - photo app/backups - PC folder backups with apps for mac/win and a cli for linux

cicko 6 hours ago

Hasn't TomTom completely pivoted to OpenStreetMap? From direct contact, I know that they are very active in OSM communities now.

jandrewrogers 4 hours ago

TomTom isn't OSM, they just use OSM as one input among many into their mapping model. OSM has significant limitations as a standalone mapping model but many companies find it useful for augmenting more sophisticated mapping models.

erikvanoosten 5 hours ago

OSM is one of multiple data sources for TomTom.

wolvoleo 6 hours ago

Yeah I was thinking of getting infomaniak for my mail. I don't really care for the encryption thing of proton (all email comes in in plain text anyway!) and I want to just be able to do plain imap without bridges.

But their stuff just feels a bit weird somehow. I didn't really want to commit yet. I'm glad to hear you had good experiences.

frevib 5 hours ago

Proton has mail, calendar, drive, docs, sheets and more coming. Everything is done e2ee where possible. In case of mail, when the peer has no Proton, mail is indeed send plaintext.

Mail is stored e2ee on server, so not even Proton can read it. Proton mail has also made PGP very easy to use. It’s Swiss based and a foundation, not a corporation. They’ve done this so they cannot easily be bought.

It ticks most boxes in terms of privacy and security.

pnw an hour ago

exceptione 5 hours ago

Lapel2742 4 hours ago

Bombthecat 5 hours ago

thejohnconway 6 hours ago

I'm using it Infomaniak, including their KDrive as a Dropbox replacement (with 2TB of data). I've even used their video conferencing app. No complaints so far. All seems to work just fine.

omnimus 5 hours ago

pkulak 2 hours ago

I can't recommend Immich enough if you want to move off Google Photos.

danilocesar 3 hours ago

Pcloud is a security nightmare. If you really have to use it, add your own crypto layer on top of it.

Gocryptfs works well for that.

Besticle 6 hours ago

If you're going through all that effort why not migrate to open-source/self-hosted?

kgwxd 5 hours ago

Email? The rest of your life will be spent wondering if anyone got your message or if you've missed something important.

Registrar, and search? Not possible.

Maps? Paper would be more practical.

Browser, done.

Git, a lot of extra work for no gain.

bluebarbet 5 hours ago

lostmsu 5 hours ago

carlosjobim an hour ago

Google has two products without competition: YouTube and Google Maps.

Don't waste your time trying different map services.

Everything else is super easy to switch to better alternatives, especially search, e-mail and browser.

gib444 3 minutes ago

Organic Maps is great for offline. It even did better directions in Europe recently, because Google Maps does not have an "avoid unpaved roads" option.

Apple Maps does driving directions way better in general. It does foreign pronunciations better too IIRC. It's even not bad as a PWA on Android ( https://maps.apple.com ).

Google Maps loves to say take eg "exit Via Emilio Enrico" on some random roundabout in some random Italian town, seemingly with no idea that there are big signs to eg "VERONA". The street name is often totally useless.

I also find Google Maps does a great job at directing me into traffic. Like, not unexpected traffic at all.

Google Maps is great at giving you terrible recommendations because of the heavily, heavily filtered/gamed reviews however. Nothing more untrustworthy than a 4.7 star review on Google.

And of course there is also Mapy, HERE, TomTom etc...

neonstatic 4 hours ago

For email I have been quite pleased with RunBox (Norway)

ekianjo 6 hours ago

> Next, I’m thinking of moving away from Google Photos. I’m considering pCloud for that.

Maybe try Immich?

nsbk an hour ago

I'm in the process of migrating to self-hosted immich and the experience is being great so far. If you have a beefy home lab it is incredibly fast and performant. One thing to mention is that you should have a good backup strategy not to risk losing your photo library

dwayne_dibley 6 hours ago

Seconded.

expedition32 3 hours ago

This is why I'm sticking to Spotify.

Maybe corporations can start to market this: we are not an American company.

boringg 5 hours ago

This doesn't make a lot of sense:

"They’re rare, but I’ve consciously decided to stay away from some Canadian alternatives. The main customers of most Canadian tech companies are in the US, and I feel they would happily move there if needed."

So in an effort to veer from the US based on idealogical positions you wouldn't support your own countrymen because you think in some future state that said copmany might hypothetically move to the US?

Canadians unable to support Canadians is what everyone around the world should read from this comment. Tall Poppy Syndrome in its purest.

sodapopcan 5 hours ago

Agreed, this is a VERY odd statement. There are a bunch of Canadian companies that have been here for a long time. I don't have the data but would DNS and hosting providers like EasyDNS and HostPappa really have primarily US customers?

bluebarbet 5 hours ago

>What utter BS

Consider for a moment how you would feel if, after carefully composing and sharing your thoughts in good faith, you received this response.

boringg 5 hours ago

tamimio 3 hours ago

> Tall Poppy Syndrome

I learned something new today, thanks! I did face this a LOT in Canadian workforce, never knew it had a term, but the way you get undermined and attacked for not being an average is crazy, taking/sharing the credit, and pushing you on the sides, excluding you from meetings and all shenanigans haha. Completely the opposite in the US, not just productivity wise, but US companies embrace individualism and “as long as you get shit done”, go wild! It’s why US companies do better, I doubt it’s the market size as always brought as a justification, I am sure if Canadian companies did better they will have US based customers too just like Switzerland had European ones.

joe_mamba 5 hours ago

Isn't it compounded with issue that something like 75% of UW grads move to the US for work?

boringg 5 hours ago

dwedge 6 hours ago

> For various reasons

Because it's trending. Likely the same reason they ended up outside the EU in the first place.

I find this to be a non article. They moved from Google to Google and Apple, installed Graphene but installed the play store for a "significant number of apps", and didn't even consider self hosting email or git.

I've probably seen a dozen of these articles now, not to mention posts on LinkedIn, and it's a shame that there is almost never any real substance to them because on the surface it's an interesting thought experiment

microtonal 6 hours ago

/r/BuyFromEU is a continuous enumeration of individuals posting from what US services to EU services they moved. I agree that these posts get uninteresting once you have seen a few. I would be more interested in I have used European service X for 6 months, these are the up/downsides I found, since they actually help people picking alternatives.

BrunoBernardino 7 hours ago

For search, I'd suggest Ecosia [1] or Qwant [2] if you don't mind ads, or Uruky [3] if you don't want them (full disclosure, I've created Uruky with my wife).

[1]: https://ecosia.org

[2]: https://qwant.com

[3]: https://uruky.com

jruz 4 hours ago

Ecosia is just Google/Bing depending on location.

Qwant is the way to go

BrunoBernardino 3 hours ago

Both use Google and Bing, though not exclusively, and both joined efforts to create the new, independent EUSP index.

Sources for Ecosia indexes/providers: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecosia#Ecosia

Sources for Qwant indexes/providers: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qwant#Development

EUSP: https://www.eu-searchperspective.com

eino 5 hours ago

Thanks, uruky sounds quite promising, giving it a try

BrunoBernardino 4 hours ago

Thanks, please reach out with any suggestions or problems you find!

Schlagbohrer 4 hours ago

For anyone who wants some eco-optimism, Ecosia has a youtube channel where they film their reforestation efforts.

BrunoBernardino 3 hours ago

And a nice blog [1] too!

[1]: https://blog.ecosia.org

_osud 8 hours ago

How comfortable are you guys with the fact that EU countries allow prosecutors and sometimes even police officers to issue their own search warrants without meaningful judicial review? Some EU courts will not exclude illegally obtained evidence either, so challenging the warrant later on will be pointless.

Oh, and you might be in a reasonable EU country and still be hit with an EIO from one of the unreasonable countries. This is especially concerning given recent ECJ rulings increasingly directing courts in receiving nations to blindly defer to the requesting party when dealing with EAWs, EIOs and similar.

Worth considering when hosting in the EU.

s_dev 7 hours ago

>How comfortable are you guys with the fact that EU countries allow prosecutors and sometimes even police officers to issue their own search warrants without meaningful judicial review?

This is a hilarious 'just asking questions' concern that doesn't address the complete 180 in direction the US is taking and descending in to authoritarianism while moving against the world order it primarily helped build post WWII while threatening other liberal democracies like Canada and Denmark with invasions.

It's a complete false equivalence. ICE agents have straight up murdered two US citizens in broad daylight without consequence and you're querying the nature of some search warrants in the EU.

copper4eva 7 hours ago

His comment did not even mention the US. Only critiquing the authoritarianism going on in the EU. One of the issues with modern politics is everyone wants to deflect.

wongarsu 6 hours ago

ahtihn 6 hours ago

surgical_fire 6 hours ago

krzyk 6 hours ago

dbvn 6 hours ago

Lol what does ICE have to do with a local police officer being able to bully a tech worker into providing your private communications?

WhrRTheBaboons an hour ago

nozzlegear 6 hours ago

> the complete 180 in direction the US is taking and descending in to authoritarianism while moving against the world order

The EU is just one AfD win away from doing the same thing. It's not immune to this issue either, you have the same problem happening right under your noses.

epolanski 5 hours ago

noobermin 5 hours ago

aleph_minus_one 7 hours ago

> the complete 180 in direction the US is taking and descending in to authoritarianism

A similar (though currently a little bit less marked) trend can also be observed for the EU and EU countries.

Maxion 6 hours ago

s_dev 6 hours ago

krzyk 6 hours ago

_osud 7 hours ago

I'm not advertising the US here or trying to troll. I'm an European pointing out things about the European system that many here will not have thought about.

>It's a complete false equivalence. ICE agents have straight up murdered two US citizens in broad daylight without consequence and you're querying the nature of some search warrants in the EU.

Maybe keep your US nonsense to yourself?

y-curious 7 hours ago

hvb2 7 hours ago

thesmtsolver2 6 hours ago

panda-giddiness 5 hours ago

throw0101c 8 hours ago

> How comfortable are you guys with the fact that EU countries allow prosecutors and sometimes even police officers to issue their own search warrants without meaningful judicial review?

(IANAL.) This was reviewed by the courts themselves:

> The CJEU confirmed that the Belgian, French and Swedish prosecutors were sufficiently independent from the executive to be able to issue EAWs. […]

> […] Public prosecutors will qualify as an issuing judicial authority where two conditions are met: […]

> 2. Second, public prosecutors must be in a position to act in an independent way, specifically with respect to the executive. The CJEU requires that the independence of public prosecutors be organised by a statutory framework and organisational rules that prevent the risk of prosecutors being subject to individual instructions by the executive (as was the case with the German prosecutor). Moreover, the framework must enable prosecutors to assess the necessity and proportionality of issuing an EAW. In the French prosecutor judgment, the CJEU specifically indicated that:

* https://www.fairtrials.org/articles/legal-analysis/can-belgi...

The question that the OP asks is fair enough, but there's a lot of subtly and 'low-level' details on how things operate compared to the high-level question that is being asked. Also depends on where the OP lives and what he's used to: common law (UK/US/CA/etc) and civil law procedures and laws are (AIUI) quite different.

Aerroon 7 hours ago

For anyone wondering:

EAW = European Arrest Warrant

EIO = European Investigative Order (basically lets different jurisdictions demand information from each other)

CJEU = Court of Justice of the EU (think of it as a supreme court)

stanac 7 hours ago

Rygian 8 hours ago

Valid question, which must be put in the context of US-based providers willingly satisfying US out-of-jurisdiction search requests for EU data without even letting the EU know about it. (And when the providers are not willing, they can be forced by U.S. Cloud Act)

https://www.forbes.com/sites/emmawoollacott/2025/07/22/micro...

mongol 7 hours ago

Sweden is a country like this. It is just the way it is here. It can be abused, sure. But all things considered, I much rather have my things hosted here than in the US.

_osud 7 hours ago

Yeah, but you also have Hungary who can decide to do things the same way they're done in Sweden and Finland.

microtonal 7 hours ago

mongol 7 hours ago

bean469 7 hours ago

> How comfortable are you guys with the fact that EU countries allow prosecutors and sometimes even police officers to issue their own search warrants without meaningful judicial review?

Just to be clear, according to the DOJ, law enforcement officials in the US can search your home without a warrant if they suspect that you are a "Alien Enemy" [1].

https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/25915967-doj-march-1...

kvuj 7 hours ago

Wouldn't source that this is happening in 1 of the member states be enough to raise alarms? Why do all of them need to for you to consider this an issue?

squarefoot 7 hours ago

Don't forget civil forfeiture, which can (an does) happen whether they think you're an enemy or not.

https://ij.org/issues/private-property/civil-forfeiture/freq...

FabCH 6 hours ago

You are technically correct but seem to be applying common law standards to civil law countries.

Unlike common law judiciary, civil law judiciary in and of itself has investigatory powers and judges don’t just hear arguments but can order their own investigations and are significantly more independent than in common law.

This can cut both ways, yes in theory the judge can accept evidence the prosecution obtained illegally, but the judges can also call the prosecutions bluff and call their own witnesses or order an independent expert to provide their own opinion, even if defense is unable to.

_osud 3 hours ago

You forgot about the Nordic countries.

nottorp 7 hours ago

US legal protections do not apply to EU citizens keeping their data in the US, do they?

So what's the point of this comparison, since if I host my data in the US they don't need a warrant at all?

PeterStuer 7 hours ago

The geo-location of where you keep your data is irrelevant to US legal reach.

paganel 6 hours ago

They don't, they don't even apply to EU citizens keeping their (our, in fact) data on our (EU's servers) if what we're doing happens to cross some interests of the US Government. I mean, there are some legal "protections" in place for that, but notice the quotes. Thinking otherwise is delusional, but, hey, people should be allowed to enjoy the liberty of their slightly larger iron bird-cage.

alpineman 8 hours ago

At least there is still the rule of law and democracy in the EU

rafram 7 hours ago

The baseline level of freedom of speech in the EU, in particular, is much, much worse than in the US. We’re talking about a group of countries with active, enforced blasphemy laws! Completely unthinkable for Americans.

microtonal 7 hours ago

tensor 2 hours ago

Bewelge 6 hours ago

dudefeliciano 7 hours ago

sofixa 4 hours ago

_osud 8 hours ago

Is there really? Governments routinely go against the ECHR and the ECJ, and do nothing to rectify past violations when ruled against.

On a national level, sure.

pjc50 7 hours ago

input_sh 8 hours ago

nozzlegear 6 hours ago

For now – the EU is one AfD win away from following in America's footsteps.

tensor 2 hours ago

krzyk 6 hours ago

heavyset_go 6 hours ago

> What Is An Administrative Warrant?

> An administrative warrant is a legal document issued by a government agency, rather than a court, that authorizes the agency to take specific actions such as conducting inspections, searches, or seizing property. Unlike judicial warrants, administrative warrants are frequently issued on less than probable cause of a crime.

> Administrative warrants are typically used for regulatory or civil enforcement purposes and allow agencies to enforce rules and regulations within their jurisdiction, such as health inspections, building code enforcement, or immigration-related actions.

> The problem with administrative warrants is that they make the agency both the prosecutor and the judge in the very same matter. The entire point of having agencies go to court for a warrant is because courts are an independent branch with an independent mission. Rather than solely focusing on identifying and prosecuting violations of law, courts seek to check agency errors and overreach. When the very same agency that wants to execute a warrant is the one deciding whether it issues, those checks disappear, and Americans’ security pays the price.

https://ij.org/issues/ijs-project-on-the-4th-amendment/admin...

andix 8 hours ago

No system is perfect. It's more a theoretical risk for now, if you're not running a shady business.

noosphr 8 hours ago

The police will of course decide if you are running a shady business.

rithdmc 7 hours ago

rich_sasha 5 hours ago

Without disagreeing at all, can you think of a major jurisdiction that's better? US I basically assume everything is searchable without a warrant, if not leaked on a ex-DOGE intern USB stick.

Who else is there with a major infra ecosystem? Russia? China? UK? Not sure these are better than EU. Japan seems quite inward looking.

mafuy 5 hours ago

This account is sockpuppeting. They are not participating on this site in good faith.

NoLinkToMe 4 hours ago

I'd say don't let perfect be the enemy of good/better. Moving from US to EU is a move for the better. But EU isn't perfect, and there might be even better options available, but unless you have them, I'd recommend starting with the move to EU.

victorbjorklund 4 hours ago

Do you seriously think that US requires warrants from US judges to spy on non-citizens abroad? That is 100% false. There is zero protection from the US govt for non-citizens living abroad.

XCSme 4 hours ago

How comfortable are you guys with the fact the US has just partnered with OpenAI to enable mass surveillance?

zulban 6 hours ago

Not comfortable. But making choices in the real world is about choosing the best option, not the perfect option.

PurpleRamen 6 hours ago

As long as you stay away from questionable behaviour, there is very little chance to encounter the police in the EU or having problems with your privacy. USA is different in that regard. Your existence can be a problem. Or monetary interests will risk your privacy to whoever wants to make money with you.

EU is not perfect, but saver than the USA in those matters (if you want to only invest a reasonable amount of effort and money), which is kinda the point here, isn't it?

_osud 5 hours ago

EU is not a single uniform blob. There are neighbourhoods where you have to worry about being shot, and there are neighbourhoods where people leave their keys inside their cars.

So, with the police? YMMV.

PurpleRamen 4 hours ago

pjc50 7 hours ago

How much is this a practical rather than theoretical problem?

One of the problems with being on the US Internet is that we get lots of coverage of US police overreach and much less coverage of EU police overreach. That could have one of three causes:

- actual incidence is low

- it's not being reported

- it is being reported, but doesn't generate discourse

(And the counter option: sometimes when you do hear about it, it's been laundered through weird US right-wing politics, like almost anything anyone says about Sweden)

aleph_minus_one 7 hours ago

> That could have one of three causes:

> - actual incidence is low

> - it's not being reported

> - it is being reported, but doesn't generate discourse

Fourth possible cause:

- the EU has 24 official languages

i.e. when it is reported, the number of people who are actually capable of understanding the reporting is only a fraction and rather localized.

megous 3 hours ago

Well https://www.devever.net/~hl/xmpp-incident

It's a problem. But it has technical rather than political solutions.

tamimio 4 hours ago

It’s why I don’t trust anyone. Sure, EU has better policies and regulations than the wild west (US/Canada), but they still can and will do monkey business when needed, and they are more twisted about it than the US. The best strategy is to host your own and encrypt all, if it’s too much effort for some services try to use one from a country that has no interest in you (outside the west for example).

deaux 8 hours ago

This isn't a downside against EU services when compared to the US, so what are you actually suggesting? Don't just vaguely hint at stuff. Should we be moving to Singaporean services? Oh shit, similar concerns there. Okay, where do you suggest we move? If you don't have any suggestions then there's little substance behind what you're saying.

_osud 8 hours ago

>This isn't a point against EU services compared to the US

In the US the cops actually need a search warrant signed by a judge. In the EU they only sometimes need one.

>Should we be moving to Singaporean services? Oh shit, similar concerns there

Really? I've always been under the impression that it is courts who issue search warrants in Singapore, not the police or prosecutors.

not_that_d 8 hours ago

generic92034 6 hours ago

watwut 6 hours ago

> Some EU courts will not exclude illegally obtained evidence either, so challenging the warrant later on will be pointless.

Generally speaking, I trust EU countries criminal systems more then USA one. USA one is too procedure oriented - like for example with this rule.

Unlike in USA, in general European cops and prosecutors can be punished when they do illegal stuff. That provides better protection then the pretend fairness rule you just cited.

_osud 5 hours ago

>Generally speaking, I trust EU countries criminal systems more then USA one. USA one is too procedure oriented - like for example with this rule.

Those procedures are written in blood

shevy-java 7 hours ago

> you might be in a reasonable EU country and still be hit with an EIO from one of the unreasonable countries.

Are you certain this has happened? I never heard that happen in central Europe. I am pretty certain legislation of other countries is irrelevant, unless it would be an EU regulation - and I am unaware of an EU regulation that could bypass local laws and that has not been made a EU law. Which EU law specifically do you refer to?

surgical_fire 8 hours ago

Generally comfortable.

While the EIO is s controversial instrument (I particularly dislike the excessive power it gives to authorities in issuing countries and the inability to question the warrant), it at least is something that happens as part of a judicial process.

I'm certainly more comfortable with it than being subject to the whims of the US government and its 3 letter agencies.

That said, yeah, EIO in the shape it exists is bad.

_osud 7 hours ago

>it at least is something that happens as part of a judicial process

Only sort of, because some countries have very weird ideas of what a "judicial process" is.

>I'm certainly more comfortable with it than being subject to the whims of the US government and its 3 letter agencies.

That's fair, but I think it's a mistake. In the worst case the European system grants a village cop in another country the authority to conduct extremely intrusive surveillance on you.

Criminals can easily co-opt this system and steal your crypto or whatever, a far more realistic threat for most people than the NSA.

surgical_fire 6 hours ago

danilocesar 5 hours ago

Whataboutyism much?

_osud 5 hours ago

[Tears of Joy Emoji][Loudly Crying Face Emoji][Loudly Crying Face Emoji][Loudly Crying Face Emoji]

kgwxd 5 hours ago

Sounds terrible. Guess we should all just accept the worst of the worst and shut up?

dangus 7 hours ago

Maybe the motivation is more to stop giving American big tech MAGA fascists money rather than any kind of gain in privacy/security against state level law enforcement.

axegon_ 8 hours ago

I've migrated just about everything I was relying on a while back. Not only that but I've self-hosted just about everything, with the exception of my email and I've moved whatever I have public on github to codeberg. With the exception of github pages, though I plan on doing that too, when I find motivation to going through the tedious DNS management. I've been on and off on qwant and ecosia for search(lately ecosia has been stepping up their game it seems). But I am considering switching over to searxng, I just want to put it behind a squid proxy somewhere remote, away from my apartment.

vertnerd 8 hours ago

Used Chromebooks are plentiful and cheap on eBay and many of them are easy to convert to Linux using the tools and instructions at https://docs.mrchromebox.tech/. I used to have a house full of Chromebooks, but now all but one of them are Linux laptops. My favorite is the Acer CP713 because it comes in flavors with lots of RAM and drive space. I also prefer the convertible touchscreen models because they can go on a shelf and make cheap and attractive Home Assistant dashboards.

mixmastamyk an hour ago

Buy and support vendors that ship proper Linux laptops. I know of Star labs and Nova Custom in the EU, both use coreboot as well.

wraptile 8 hours ago

You can also get a refurbished thinkpad with Ryzen and 16gb of ram for 400€ or so on european Ebay.

bluebarbet 7 hours ago

You seem to know what you're talking about. I used a cheapie Taiwanese Intel netbook for years, on Linux, with great success. When it came to replace it, there was nothing left in that niche (i.e. small and cheap) except ARM Chromebooks with (apparently) locked bootloaders. So I reluctantly bought a heavy and expensive Intel laptop.

Was I wrong to assume that the average big-box-store Chromebook cannot be jailbroken, or has only driverless hardware, or are things changing here? If the latter, surely this opens a boulevard for Linux? Any insight much appreciated.

dangus 7 hours ago

I never understood why bother with these.

You get a dealbreaker keyboard because of the lack of an alt key and you don’t even save much money for the effort of working around the Chromebook restrictions. A laptop originally sold with Windows is so much more straightforward to work with.

I’d just grab something like an HP EliteBook 840 G10 on eBay. Around $300, upgradable RAM and SSD, and reasonably recent. Relatively modern/attractive aluminum build.

Or I’m sure there’s some other 2-in-1 not-Chromebook convertible model you can grab if you need the touch screen.

whiterose1214 2 hours ago

Lot of discussion about different privacy laws across jurisdictions, and while I understand a lot of users have different approaches to privacy and opinions on political matters, realistically if your threat model is the NSA or some other three-letter agency:

a) migrating to a different jurisdiction isn't realistically a massive barrier for them (related: https://www.usenix.org/system/files/1401_08-12_mickens.pdf)

b) if they're taking the time to get a "secret" warrant for you, you have much larger issues. It's like building a car that's resistant to hellfire missiles. It'll help, but if you're getting hellfire missiles thrown at you, you have much larger problems than the structural integrity of your vehicle.

Realistically, there's a reason that a lot of these services are underused. Many of them lack reliable support, many of them aren't as useful, and the vast majority lack the interconnectivity that makes services like Drive and Gmail so useful to the vast majority of consumers. In addition, if your evaluation of the utility of US companies is based on which party is in power, you should know that both parties equally don't care about your privacy, and never have.

jrexilius 2 hours ago

If your threat model is the NSA, moving to non-US providers actually lowers the barrier as they no longer have to deal with the US constitution and US citizen data. If your threat model is law enforcement (or border/customs, et al), moving to EU really doesn't cause much in the way of speed bumps.

In my opinion though, the real threat model is not the actual government, its the US corporations. The NSA wont sell your information to any bad actor with a credit card and, realistically, doesn't care about you. But there is much that can be stolen or exploited for financially-motivated bad-actors from non-extradition countries or others with differing interests than your own.

cjs_ac an hour ago

Yeah, sure, but this idea that the government is the threat you're defending against is very American. I'm not saying I trust my government with a lot of my personal data, but they're not the most important threat I'm defending against when I look after my privacy online.

mixmastamyk an hour ago

Defeatism; alternatives don't have to be perfect to be useful. In other words, it's a journey, not a destination.

whiterose1214 13 minutes ago

Totally get what you're saying, and improving personal security can also be fun as a mental exercise. It's just there's a lot comments in this thread (hundreds) about how you can migrate EU to escape USG surveillance, which is just not realistic.

dragochat 8 hours ago

how about the OPPOSITE problem: _anyone knows of any non-EU AND non-US email providers_? with email accounts as the roots of trust for many things, i'd really wanna know how can I get a trustworthy one not-attached to eithern an unstable system (US), or a very overregulating one like the EU juristictions...

and ofc, non-CN too

pavlov 8 hours ago

So where do you want to host your email?

Name a country and it probably has its own problems: some combination of instability, corruption, authoritarian governments, collaboration with the US and EU governments that you want to escape…

ProtonMail is in Switzerland, so it’s perhaps the best mainstream bet. But the Swiss are absolutely not immune to US and EU pressure.

lynx97 7 hours ago

Isn't Proton planning to move to .de?

keybits 7 hours ago

Runbox are a good option - company and servers in Norway: https://runbox.com/

Been around since 2000. They're also working on JMAP support and are the top financial contributor to the Stalwart mail server (https://opencollective.com/stalwart) so I think they'll have a more compelling offering soon.

Also worth keeping an eye on Thunderbird pro which will also use Stalwart: https://www.tb.pro/en-US/

Aachen 2 minutes ago

Can recommend Runbox for a lot of reasons, but one gotcha that bothered me in day-to-day use was that emails are delayed by a minimum of 30 seconds, with no real upper bound, just a probability curve with, say, the 90th percentile around 5 minutes. On rare occasions, that means OTPs or login links valid for 5 minutes have expired when you get them. Yes I talked to support, yes they cared, yes they subsequently ghosted me when delivering the requested headers of emails delayed for more than 5 minutes which they considered a normal delay "because email wasn't supposed to be real-time" (be that as it may, that doesn't take away the problem that you sit there 30 seconds... 60 seconds... 90 seconds, wondering if you should go do something else while you wait for the confirmation link and get back to your current task later)

Seriously though, nothing but recommended in every other regard. Alias management, anonymous domains you can use, configuring the sender in Thunderbird no problem, everything else was great. My colleagues didn't seem to mind this delay so much as me so it's something to be aware of but might work fine for you

Nemo_bis 4 hours ago

I agree, as a happy Runbox customer of several years. But probably the parent post meant non-EEA too, as Norway is effectively subject to any and all EU regulations.

PeterStuer 7 hours ago

I'm using Zoho (Indian company, hosted in Europe). Maybe not perfect from a geopolitical pov, but it will do for now.

stingraycharles 8 hours ago

Singapore, Japan have reliable ISPs.

lmz 7 hours ago

If the goal is to stay away from US or European influence then the Russians would be a better bet.

stingraycharles 6 hours ago

groguzt 5 hours ago

Proton is in Switzerland, which is not part of EU

PurpleRamen 6 hours ago

> how about the OPPOSITE problem: _anyone knows of any non-EU AND non-US email providers_?

Yes, your own server at home. All countries have fundamentally the same problems, so you will have everywhere the same tradeoffs as a customer. So it really depends on what your specific circumstances and requirements are. If laws are your problem, then stay away from countries where you break them; otherwise, just don't go where they will sell your data for any random penny.

> or a very overregulating one like the EU juristictions...

WTF is this kind of demand? Those regulations do not concern you as a user, but can be very beneficial for you, don't you understand this?

petesergeant 8 hours ago

For email and calendaring, Fastmail, although Her Majesty’s Australian government has strong overreach instincts.

lonelyasacloud 7 hours ago

> For email and calendaring, Fastmail, although Her Majesty’s Australian government has strong overreach instincts.

The Queen died of 8th September 2022.

dragochat 7 hours ago

...would those "overreach instinct" expand to "handing over access an overreaching and likely corrupt EU or US prosecutor"? (I don't care about 5eyes etc, spyies will spy me, I just don't want stuff to be easily and unexpectedly draggable in a court case, or am email used as bolt-key to access other things to get blocked by a prosecutor's regulation...)

ffsm8 7 hours ago

realusername 8 hours ago

Fastmail is australian

roelschroeven 7 hours ago

But their servers are in the US.

dangus 7 hours ago

lol, you want trustworthy stability without “too many” regulations. Good luck with that.

I’m not sure you know what instability means if you think the US is unstable. If anything, the fact that the dumbest person on the planet is in charge of the United States and the country still functions as well as it does proves a lot about the stability of the USA. The country runs on geopolitical easy mode.

Maybe there’s a libertarian fantasy novel where you can host your services.

I_am_tiberius 8 hours ago

Codeberg is only for FOSS projects. Is there some good European hosting provider for git? I really don't want to self host git.

petcat 8 hours ago

devault made sourcehut which I think is hosted in the netherlands

https://sr.ht

I tried it once, it's very opinionated and may not be suitable for what a lot of people think of when they're coming from something like Github. The required old-school patch-by-mail thing is a blocker for a lot of people.

AndrewDucker 8 hours ago

I am boggled by the number of people who see "I really don't want to X" and then reply with "Here's how to easily do X!"

icy 5 hours ago

https://tangled.org :) We're hosted in the EU.

rapnie 8 hours ago

Regarding Forgejo [0] there are a number of other open providers listed on the delightful forgejo [1] curated list. In addition there is a Professional services repository [2] where services are listed in the issue tracker.

[0] https://forgejo.org

[1] https://delightful.coding.social/delightful-forgejo/#public-...

[2] https://codeberg.org/forgejo/professional-services/issues

dethos 5 hours ago

One of the other comments mentions https://codefloe.com. I haven't tested and haven't yet checked their background, but they seem to allow private repositories.

I_am_tiberius 3 hours ago

That sounds good. I'm a bit confused about missing pricing. It says free tier is generous but I can't find any prices.

layer8 6 hours ago

Take a look at https://www.lcube-webhosting.de/en/svn-hosting-repositoryonl..., starts at 2.90 Euro. No personal experience, but the fact that they are still including SVN support tells you how long-established they are.

Google reviews: https://www.google.com/search?q=lcube&ludocid=91685905651961...

p2detar 8 hours ago

I self-host Forgejo on a Docker container. Thinking about it, this is actually the right way to go.

If you got public projects, then something like Codeberg is in fact the place to go. If you got private projects, why push to someone's cloud-hosted git service at all? Push to your own service like Forgejo and sync backups to a local hard-drive or even online using rclone.

nottorp 7 hours ago

Because I don't mind paying github $4 or $7 and not worry about the admin burden.

Of course, this goes for simpler setups where you only use the git hosting part. Because to switch providers you only have to change the remote and push.

If you got yourself dependent on their other pipelines, it's more complicated.

christophilus 8 hours ago

I think Sourcehut is EU based now.

fanatic2pope 7 hours ago

For just the basics, self-hosting of git can be pretty easy. I use gitolite on a VPS.

https://gitolite.com/gitolite/

thijsw 7 hours ago

Yes, check out https://www.gitlabhost.com/ It is based in the Netherlands

roelschroeven 7 hours ago

AFAICS the cheapest option is 250€/month. That seems geared towards businesses, not individuals.

I_am_tiberius 7 hours ago

Crazy expensive for small projects

olavgg 8 hours ago

Gitea is one of the easiest projects to to self-host. And to do regular upgrades, you only need to update one file. It has been a joy to self-host for many years now.

Jnr 7 hours ago

I don't even update one file. I run it in docker with daily automatic container updates and it has been working fine without issues for years.

teekert 8 hours ago

Uhm, is it? I have some small repos there, which are private and for my company (ie the website). I didn't encounter any warnings?

Edit, it says indeed (right in your face on the front page):

Codeberg is a non-profit, community-led effort that provides services to free and open-source projects, such as Git hosting.

I just click... click opened a repo and set it as remote and boom. Never thought anything of it... Perhaps I'm... Tolerated for the time being?

PurpleRamen 7 hours ago

You are just a glitch in their system. They won't check the content of private repos, and they probably also do not check if there is free software hosted at the same account, so you might have found the hole in their good will.

But their limit seems around 100 MB storage-usage, so I guess it's within their abilities to tolerate some glitches.

teekert 5 hours ago

lynx97 8 hours ago

Git is extremely easy to "self host". What makes things complicated are the web interfaces around code hosting, and all their supposedly important features. These days, Prs, issues, forums, wikis and all that seem to be synonymous with "git", which is pretty weird.

kace91 8 hours ago

What do you mean by supposedly?

The PR model is pretty much universal for a reason. I get why it is considered out of scope for core git, but it is by no means a weird fixation people have.

lynx97 8 hours ago

rapnie 8 hours ago

Because there isn't really a good name. In FOSS circles the name "code forge" is often used, and then OP might say "git-based code forge" instead. But both Github and Gitlab don't consider themself (and aren't) code forges. The term doesn't carry the load of the product positioning. So "hosting provider for git" is a pretty good description imho.

ptsneves 8 hours ago

Which is ironic because PR is definitely alien to git. There is no such git concept as a PR, nor git pr command.

Coming from a pure git workflow in mailing lists where branches, and commits(and associated diff and git am metadata) are the unit of work, I struggled to adapt into the PR concept in the beginning.

I liked to work with gerrit, where the unit of the review is the commit. This also ensured a nice little history and curation of the change set. The commit in github is not even in the main tab of the PR. It is like it is a second thought. Even in the review, reviewing by commit is awkward and discouraged.

_flux 8 hours ago

cyanydeez 8 hours ago

gitlab ce is easy to host.

sam_lowry_ 8 hours ago

Here's a step-by step guide:

Change directory to your local git repository that you want to share with friends and colleagues and do a bare clone git clone --bare . /tmp/repo.git You just created a copy of the .git folder without all the checked out files.

Upload /tmp/repo.git to your linux server over ssh. Don't have one? Just order a tiny cloud server from Hetzner or another European provider. You can place your git repository anywhere, but the best way is to put it in a separate folder, e.g. /var/git. The command would look like with scp -r /tmp/repo.git me@server:/var/git/.

To share the repository with others, create a group, e.g. groupadd --users me git You will be able to add more users to the group with groupmod.

Your git repository is now writable only by me. To make it writable by the git group, you have to change the group on all files in the repository to git with chgrp -R git /var/repo.git and enable the group write bit on them with chmod -R g+w /var/repo.git.

This fixes the shared access for existing files. For new files, we have to make sure the group write bit is always on by changing UMASK from 022 to 002 in /etc/login.defs.

There is one more trick. For now on, all new files and folders in /var/git will be created with the user's primary group. We could change users to have git as the primary group.

But we can also force all new files and folders to be created with the parent folder's group and not user primary group. For that, set the group sticky bit on all folders in /var/git with find /var/git -type d -exec chmod g+s \{\} +

You are done.

Want to host your git repository online? Install caddy and point to /var/git with something like

    example.com {
      root * /var/git
      file_server
    }
Your git repository will be instantly accessible via https://example.com/repo.git.

appstorelottery 8 hours ago

I would add Hetzner for hosting. German based, solid in my experience with virtual servers.

aleph_minus_one 7 hours ago

In Germany, netcup (https://www.netcup.com/) is also quite popular among customers who are

- small or midsize companies, or

- "hacker-minded people" (I know quite some "hacker-minded people" who rent a server or vServer at netcup),

since they offer quite a bit of value for the money. In opposite to Hetzner, netcup is more of an inside tip.

poolnoodle 4 hours ago

dewey 2 hours ago

awongh 6 hours ago

> The reasons for this are [...] improved data protection.

Didn't the Snowden leaks just prove that the NSA is listening to most things anyway?

I suppose this has more to do with the specific case of a lower-level agency being able to access your data, rather than it being actually secure?

I get that people would be concerned about that scenario, but also it seems like a little bit of hair-splitting.

Schlagbohrer 4 hours ago

GDPR is real, and real good

awongh 3 hours ago

I think GDPR is a good example of why it doesn't really work in practice.

I think the fines and enforcement have been a generally good balance to the status quo in the USA.

But- in practice, is your data materially used differently than in the USA?

The problem is that no one is abandoning facebook, instagram or youtube and that data is being used in the exact same way as it is in the USA- to sell you things and track you across the web. Technically there are more barriers to getting and using that data, but I would argue that it's not a blocker, just an inconvenience to those using that data- it just makes the targeting etc. 10% less accurate. The whole system still runs the exact same way.

And, to make it look like it seem like it works now everyone has to deal with these dumb popups that don't mean anything.

tonydav 7 hours ago

For mail I've been using migadu.

I self host most services: contacts, calendar, git, ..

Agree on mullvad, buy giftcard on amazon.

Tried hetzner, but it wouldn't allow me to create an account. Ovh it is.

I haven't thought about registrars, I don't think it matters for most tld. (Moniker, porkbun)

kioleanu 7 hours ago

If you buy directly from Mullvad, they delete the transaction details after two weeks. Sure, your payment procesor knows you’ve bought from Mullvad, but in this case so does Amazon, no?

Regarding Migadu, after extensive research it seemed to be the best option, but man that 20 outgoing emails limit is just so off-putting and the next tier is so far apart. I would be comfortable paying 50-60 euros per year for 50 outgoing emails, but no, it’s either 20 for 20 euros or 100 for 90 euros

zie an hour ago

I have like 20-ish[0] people using my Migadu account and I've only hit the hard limit once, and it was because one of them was trying to do a mailing list....

Once I got them on a better path, I haven't had any issues. I don't remember what plan exactly, but I've been a customer for a long time, since they were founded pretty much.

0: I host a non-profit and we use my migadu account, since they are broke and I'm too lazy to count the actual number.

aktau 7 hours ago

> Agree on mullvad, buy giftcard on amazon.

I've heard this before. Is this just to add another hop in the chain to make it harder for someone to track the user down? Apart from someone needing to order Amazon to pony up the details ("Which credit card was this Amazon item bought with?")

Is there another layer of privacy I'm missing?

drcharris 5 hours ago

The gift card is a scratch off and has a number that is used to fund your Mullvad balance. So Amazon doesn't know which instance of the gift card you ordered, meaning there's no link to your specific Mullvad account payment.

The authorities might know you ordered a gift card, but not which Mullvad account you funded it with.

bombcar 7 hours ago

Giftcards from Amazon will be enough of a stumbling block to stop copyright trolls and such.

it won't even slow down actual criminal investigations by nation states and might not even stop a determined civil suit.

actionfromafar 7 hours ago

Or send cash in an envelope.

tonydav 7 hours ago

Doesn't cost extra

No need to share my cc with yet another company.

XCSme 4 hours ago

Shameless plug: if you think about switching from Google Analytics/Hotjar, check out my project[0] (built in EU, started in Romania, now working on it remotely in Netherlands).

If not, happy to hear any criticism or the alternatives you decided to go with instead.

[0]: https://www.uxwizz.com

andix 8 hours ago

Is there a good tool to automatically (and continuously) mirror all GitHub repositories to another provider? Something with GH API integration that also catches newly created projects/repos?

Issues and PRs would be a bonus, but not a requirement in my case.

patcon 8 hours ago

Haven't used it, but I've been intrigued by git-bug (stores issues in got itself) for years, to use as the issue/pr sync.

Bonus that now the issues aren't vendor locked either

https://github.com/git-bug/git-bug/blob/trunk/doc/feature-ma...

hbbio 8 hours ago

Still not accepting Codeberg moral stance.

Yes, gitea (and originally gogs) are released under permissive licenses, so it's legally allowed to fork them.

But forking complete working projects with years of work, rebranding with a "good guys" attitude, and progressively erasing the name/history (mentioning a gitea fork has moved down the faq now) is not fair.

Edit: even worse, the word "fork" is not in the FAQ. It is "Comparison with Gitea" now (fork is mentioned on that page).

jen729w 8 hours ago

> Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software…

https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/blob/main/LICENSE

If you don't want your software used like that, don't choose this licence.

You can't post-hoc decide how people behave.

jdiaz97 7 hours ago

open source is all fun and games until they fork you

cobalt60 6 hours ago

looperhacks 6 hours ago

This is already a crazy take on its own, why would a fork have to describe their relation to the parent project front and center? Both the Readme and the comparison page link to the origin blog post [1] that describes the lineage clearly.

But even if there were some "ethical reason" to do this, I don't think Gitea is the right project to play up as a victim. Their homepage [2] doesn't mention that Gitea itself is a fork either. Their Readme does, but is this so much better?

[1]: https://forgejo.org/2022-12-15-hello-forgejo/ [2]: https://about.gitea.com/

s_dev 8 hours ago

https://european-alternatives.eu/

I recommend Scaleway for cloud hosting. I recently migrated from Digital Ocean who I really loved, to Scaleway and have I have to say impressed with both dashboard interface and pricing so far.

In work we still use AWS but everything is hosted in eu-west (Ireland) in AWS EU Sovereign cloud but not sure how truly compliant this is in a CloudAct vs GDPR showdown.

I've yet to migrate from namecheap but planning on moving my domains to inwx. My MacBook Pro will be hard to replace so that will be years away. Nothing phones look cool but I would like to go with EU solutions rather than British ones. https://commerce.jolla.com/products/jolla-phone-sep-ii-2026 looks cool but some the HackerNews guys have been quite critical so I'm still considering what those next devices will be.

vldszn 4 hours ago

Not sure if it counts, but I’m based in Warsaw, Poland (EU) and working on a free and open-source invoice generator: https://easyinvoicepdf.com

Github: https://github.com/VladSez/easy-invoice-pdf

It doesn’t have any backend and all data is stored in the browser.

Raed667 8 hours ago

> set up catch-all addresses but also send emails from any email address I wanted

I have been frustrated with ProtonMail for this exact reason, i have a catch all but responding is a hassle where i have to manually create an address.

I wish Proton would just allow me to respond to an email from the address it was addressed to

sobiolite 8 hours ago

I’m not with I could ever migrate away from Gmail, even if I wanted to. I have so many accounts and services linked to it.

microtonal 8 hours ago

Don't make the same mistake again, get a domain so that you can keep using the same address when switching between providers. Then set up GMail to forward e-mail to your new address. Then slowly update the E-mail address in your account. You could even set up a label that gets attached to e-mails that arrived through your GMail address. In that way, you can easily see the stuff that still needs to be updated.

Untangling yourself from Google (or Apple, which is similarly hard), doesn't have to be all at once. Break it up in small steps that feel like individual wins.

One more note about using your own domain: avoid provider-specifict features like subdomain addressing (made it more work for me to move off Fastmail).

vertnerd 8 hours ago

If you are using a password manager, start by searching for every record with your gmail address. Make a list. Every day, go to the next entry on the list and change your email with that app or service.

Of course, set up gmail to forward messages to your new address and filter them into a folder. Once you have changed all the services you know about, watch for emails coming to the gmail folder, looking for more services that need to be updated. Eventually the only thing arriving in the folder is spam and you can just route it all into the garbage.

threethirtytwo 7 hours ago

There's no point in switching. Most of these people are dealing with a threat that has an extremely low probability of happening. It is not in any practical way going to affect your life and for most of the people here busy switching to EU services they likely don't have any major example of where it has affect them or anyone one degree away from them.

It's mostly an ideal. Like OSS. The practical reality means that such extreme adherence to only EU services doesn't do anything but make your life harder. It's like saying you only use open source, from the CPU to the GPU to your OS and everything else... make it all from open source, how big of a nightmare would that be? The only time it is practical is if you're doing really illegal shit and you need the data protection.

nottorp 5 hours ago

With google, the problem is that their "AI" can randomly ban you though. And the only recourse is making it to the top of HN. If that even works any more.

jobigoud 6 hours ago

> doesn't do anything but make your life harder.

No it also encourages the local market and healthy competition. This way in the future we don't fall into the same enshittification trap.

thejohnconway 6 hours ago

Honestly, the instability of the political environment in US feels so extreme, that it seems like something could bite you that you didn't even see coming.

Just on the Gmail front: maybe Trump decides to trade embargo you country and pressures Google to cut off email access. Maybe he decides Google needs to be broken up and sold for parts, and Gmail's data goes to Truth Social. Maybe he thinks illegal immigrants or "radical left wing lunatics" shouldn't have access to American email providers and gets Google to start suspending accounts based on a some criteria. Maybe some of this seems far fetched, but we are talking about a president who threatened to to go to war with one of America's closest allies.

The non-American west's exposure to the instability is too high, and already affecting people. Switching software providers where possible is something that can be done quickly, and relatively easily by individuals in the short term.

sylens 8 hours ago

It’s easier than you think when you stop trying to treat it as an all or nothing move and more of a gradual migration. Fastmail makes it really easy to keep the two in sync

4k93n2 3 hours ago

i thought the same but ive actually moved twice now. first to protonmail whenever that came out, then again a few years ago to posteo. it actually didnt feel like that much work in the end. i set up forwarding and switched over a few accounts every week. i still kept my gmail account around for years just in case but there will be a point where you just know you have all the important things switched over

ralferoo 8 hours ago

Nowadays, I primarily only use gmail because the mail client is good on Android. But all my accounts have been self-hosted for years now and gmail just reads them via POP3 (never managed to get it happy with IMAP for some reason) and sends via my own SMTP.

Can anyone recommend actually decent and free Android (and also web) mail clients for self-hosted use? Everything I've tried so far (but to be fair, it was a few years ago when I last checked) just felt clunky compared to gmail, so I've ended up sticking with it as a client far longer than I probably should.

Grumbledour 4 hours ago

I've been using FairEmail[1] for some years now as a replacement and find it superior to the gmail app. Of course, depending on your needs and tastes, I could also understand calling it a bit clunky. It is FOSS, but has a one time pay premium option for some advanced features. But really, it's also just fair to support the dev by buing the app. My only complaint would be, that there are to many updates, but of course, you can just ignore them and do them every few months instead.

[1] https://email.faircode.eu/

4k93n2 3 hours ago

thunderbird (formerly k9 mail) is a decent enough android app, but im not very picky when it comes to email either so keep that in mind. ive been using it with posteo for about 2 years now

mhitza 8 hours ago

Took me a year of slow migration so that my essential emails and connected services don't go over Gmail. Email is the hardest to move because of its central nature as an online identity.

sodapopcan 5 hours ago

I did it with tons of accounts and services linked. It's not anywhere as daunting as you'd think (and I thought). Although it seems you don't want to move away from it so I'm not sure what point your comment serves to make.

fsflover 8 hours ago

Set up the redirect and change the emails of your services one by one whenever you have a minute of time. It took a year for me, and I am free now.

iso1631 7 hours ago

I let my old 4 letter .com domain expire around 2000ish and got suckered into the whole gmail etc thing after sitting on university and hotmail for a while

In 2019 I decided enough was enough and registered a new domain and started moving my accounts over as new ones came up, or I updated addressing

I have very little left on gmail now other than spam from old services I no longer use. Top one in the inbox at the moment is Facebook telling my I have "530 notifications about X". Its sad how desperate they are.

bkolobara 6 hours ago

Shameless plug. We have been working on building a European GitHub alternative for private repos at https://lubeno.dev.

levmiseri 4 hours ago

For a European alternative to Google Docs / Notion, we made https://kraa.io/about that might work for you if all you need is a simple editor with collab features.

cdrnsf 4 hours ago

Migrating away from US services altogether is an admirable goal. In cases where that's not possible, it's still worth moving off the services and platforms offered by large tech companies.

madflo 8 hours ago

I have been a customer of OVH’s new Zimbra Starter service. It works for my personal and professional needs, CalDAV and ActiveSync are active. I do not use the web interface so no feedback on this.

choo-t 8 hours ago

Does their Zimbra implementation support 2FA ?

jagermo 8 hours ago

Uberspace is solid and a lot of fun to try stuff out. For domains, i would also recommend inwx.com, they have been around for ages, good prices and no-fuzz admin stuff.

FinnKuhn 8 hours ago

The author mentions using them as well, but I personally would have a really hard time trusting any service run by any individual and be it just in case something happens to them.

jasonvorhe 8 hours ago

It's a team of 10+ people though.

shafyy 8 hours ago

I tried Uberspace for email and what bothered me that you can only set up one email domain per Asteroid. So if you have multiple domains, it gets expensive quickly... (depending on how many users per domain you have). But other than that, great company with a great ethical stance (and as far as I can tell, great technical infrastructure). I will definitely be going back to them if I need a simple VPS.

NoSalt 5 hours ago

> "the EU currently has the most user-friendly laws when it comes to data protection"

I have not done any research into this facet of EU laws, but isn't the EU simply horrible when it comes to privacy of your data from a nosy government?

SlinkyOnStairs 4 hours ago

> but isn't the EU simply horrible when it comes to privacy of your data from a nosy government?

It's a case of "better is not perfect".

Yes, the EU & it's member states allow the police quite a bit of access to data and servers. However, there are still decently functional checks and balances. Unlike China, unlike Russia, unlike the US, where there is a carte-blanche already employed by authoritarian governments.

What the line really seems to refer to is General data protection. While "the state spies on you" is one attack vector, and one certainly becoming dangerous for oppressed minority groups in the US, it's not the only one.

For most people, really, all people because the authoritarian systems rely heavily on data from breaches, the chief risk to one's wellbeing are said data breaches. Of companies recklessly collecting all data they can get their hands on and retaining it forever.

There, the EU does have notably better laws. Where data collection and retention are restricted, and user-requested deletion is a legal right. (Enforcement of this is still a mess.)

jojomodding 5 hours ago

In what sense are governments in the EU more nosy than the one in the US or China?

cl3misch 5 hours ago

I think OP means user-friendly in the relationship user-company, not user-government.

Ylpertnodi 4 hours ago

> but isn't the EU simply horrible when it comes to privacy of your data from a nosy government?

Depends on the country, as much as it would xState in the US.

brandrick 8 hours ago

Proton ticks a few of those boxes for me. Mail, VPN, Cal.

robertlagrant 8 hours ago

Also docs collaboration, and now video calling as well. And they've just bought Standard Notes, so that'll be next. It's definitely chugging along fast.

sime2009 8 hours ago

proton.me? That is in Switzerland, not the EU.

knorker 6 hours ago

The stated reason in the article seems like Switzerland should be as good as EU, if not better.

> I have decided to move as many services and subscriptions as possible from non-EU countries to the EU or to switch to European service providers. The reasons for this are the current global political situation and improved data protection.

"or switch to European service providers". EU or not, CH is still in Europe, so would qualify?

severino 8 hours ago

> First, I tried mailbox.org, which I can generally recommend without reservation. Unfortunately, you can’t send emails from any address on your own domain without a workaround, so the search continued.

I had read about other problems about this mailbox.org service, but not this one. Anyone knows what's the catch when trying to send emails from your own domain?

kioleanu 7 hours ago

I think he means that he can have a catch-all, but to reply from that address, there needs to be an alias created on the account

mads_quist 6 hours ago

If you need an on-call / incident management platform like PagerDuty or incident.io All Quiet offers EU based Hosting and is operated from Germany:

https://allquiet.app

dwedge 6 hours ago

While it's in your bio, I feel like you should have made it more obvious that this is your company

evnsio 6 hours ago

Just for completeness, both PagerDuty and incident.io offer EU hosting.

kouunji 7 hours ago

Honestly this is part of a macro trend of everyone outside the US scrambling to get off a US tech stack…these are going to be the longer term economic consequences for the country, as it is no longer seen as a safe option for any kind of data or service exposure.

pelzatessa 6 hours ago

> I’ve always been a happy Mullvad customer. For 5 euros a month, I pay a Swedish company that has proven it doesn’t log any data

How did they prove that? Is such proof even possible?

crosa 5 hours ago

Start by the fact that in their system you are just a random number that is generated at the moment you arrive in their website. They make very easy to pay without having to use any of your personal data, like Credit Card. Overall I think if a company put so much effort on that side, they simply don't have any data to log, or if they do is pretty anonymous anyway :)

pelzatessa 5 hours ago

While their account privacy policy is commendable, it isn't a proof for not collecting logs.

Even without personal details you can collect quite a lot of data - ip address that uses certain VPN account, which servers it talks to while using vpn, at what hours, at what intervals, also all the plaintext data exchanged between client and server. A lot of data that someone (who might already have your ip address mapped to your personal info, for example your ISP, or an online store where you shopped something before you turned on the VPN) would be willing to pay good money for. And companies like money.

eviks 5 hours ago

The usual proof is whether law enforcement agencies can force the company to share such data

Aldipower 5 hours ago

For transactional email, Lettermint is a great email broadcaster from the Netherlands. Saying this as a German means they really must be good!

achayala 6 hours ago

I did the same! The only problem with this is the uptime of codeberg.org, it sucks haha, but that is not a problem for me. I have not critical services there.

fmajid 6 hours ago

The EU is not a privacy and human rights panacea, as shown by the continuing efforts to impose Chat Control. Switzerland is no better.

Then again one of my wife’s friends is high up in the Canadian policy establishment and some of her positions on surveillance and political control over social media were chilling, and I assume widespread among the Five Eyes. Certainly the UK and Australia have deeply authoritarian policies far beyond even Trump’s wildest dreams.

Small countries like Iceland have enlightened policies but are vulnerable to coercion and in fact were militarily occupied during WW2.

askonomm 2 hours ago

I find it odd that EU is judged by efforts that have time and time again _failed_, when I'd see that as a perfect example of a system actually working, because people do have the power to stop hostile legislation, whereas I see no such thing at all in the US.

AlexandrB 4 hours ago

Yup, I don't get someone who would look at the US and say that their government overreach is particularly bad compared to the rest of the "first world". For example, the UK is arresting people for getting too spicy in school Facebook groups[1]. It just feels like "grass is greener" mentality because folks on here are most familiar with US political issues.

[1] https://www.thetimes.com/uk/education/article/police-arrest-...

askonomm 2 hours ago

Do the immigration police in UK also murder their own citizens in broad daylight? What about incarceration (and falsely incarcerated) rates? What about general cases of police brutality? What about pedophile-run government where nobody ever gets arrested? What about a government that's bailing out known criminals for money? Or one that rug pulls its own citizens via crypto scams, phone scams, citizenship scams? USA is so far beyond comparison to any other country that it's not even funny. The whole place is a con artists paradise, run by con artists, for con artists.

Not to mention that they are actively hostile towards its own allies, threaten to annex ally territory, don't want to help its allies, and then when it can't pull off a war it on its own started, then EU is supposed to come help? And when we don't, we get insulted for not being friendly? Honestly, F USA, and everything that place stands for. What a toxic cesspool of a place.

twoquestions 7 hours ago

For the longest time it was an economic axiom that regulations drive off businesses, and here stronger laws are directly attracting business!

varjag 6 hours ago

It's the rule of law that attracts business.

lvales 7 hours ago

This is something I've been trying to help people and companies with excipio (shameless plug). Data and digital sovereignty are fundamental nowadays.

nopakos 6 hours ago

One concern is that if an EU company becomes very successful, it could easily be acquired by a large U.S. corporation.

mafuy 5 hours ago

If you have a good path and a bad path that may or may not converge sometime later on your journey, you still should walk the good path.

gib444 5 hours ago

You're not wrong. But no SaaS is forever. Price rises, bankruptcies, ToS changes, change of CEO etc. Being acquired by a US company is just one of the things that can happen.

For someone like the author, it's not a reason to stay with a US company

And helping European companies be more successful might prevent them from selling out...

Invictus0 5 hours ago

Don't worry, EU companies never become that successful

gib444 5 hours ago

Weird, I've worked for multiple that got acquired by US companies

canmi21 5 hours ago

Big companies never treat your data good. It's better to store it privately :(

leftytak 3 hours ago

I'd like to get out of the matrix as much as the next guy, but I haven't found any reliable alternatives that actually provide equivalent services.

And in terms of degoogled phones, I like the idea, but the conspiracy theorist in me tells me, "hhhhmmmm, people are leaving the google / apple ecosystem, and the best phones out there for degooling is Pixel phones by google..."

That's like the best move Google made, their "free" services are the main driver for selling their phones.

stronglikedan 3 hours ago

What a waste of time. It's all the same regardless of location. There's better things to do than worry about bogeymen.

_joel 8 hours ago

You can take fastmail from my cold, dead hands :D About the only thing I can rely on to actually work.

shafyy 8 hours ago

Yes, same here. I tried some EU providers like Mailbox, Tuta and Uberspace. In the end, even though Fastmail is not EU-based, at least it's based in Australia (and not US) and they have a solid track record as a company to make the right decisions and not chase every hype. So, this is good enough for me. For now.

evan_a_a 7 hours ago

Australia is a member of five eyes and the US basically treats them like the 51st state.

AlexandrB 4 hours ago

max_ 5 hours ago

> The reasons for this are the current global political situation and improved data protection

I don't understand why people keep saying this when Europe is more hostile towards privacy.

The constantly insist on schemes like chat control, and GrapheneOS users are often confronted by legal authorities.

They may have "the laws", but its way less trust worthy.

mafuy 5 hours ago

You misunderstand this. Yes, there have been moves by some in the EU to reduce privacy, but they face resistance and have actually been repelled often. The ChatControl debacle you mention is one such instance. And on the other hand, sometimes there is actual progress, like with GDPR.

But more importantly, at least there are privacy laws in the EU that do something. In the US, there are virtually none, so of course you won't hear about their erosion.

I trust the EU ten times more than the US in this regard.

kuon 5 hours ago

For domains, spread them across multiple registrars.

unsupp0rted 4 hours ago

> For a long time, I was a satisfied Namecheap customer.

Other than them suddenly and arbitrarily deleting your account on a week's notice if you chose to have been born in the wrong country, they're great.

Arbitrarily because you can always email them and explain why you chose to be born in the wrong country and how you're actually one of the good ones.

But you don't understand: most of their employees are from a country that the wrong country is currently in conflict with, so they can't stand idly by while you sit there with your birth certificate hanging over you.

pennaMan 7 hours ago

> the EU currently has the most user-friendly laws when it comes to data protection

This is laughable. The EU has the most big-tech regulatory capture friendly data laws that make it really hard for small companies to compete, nicely packaged under consumer protection pretenses.

Those same laws give the institutions of the state complete and total right to silently wiretap the digital existence of anyone, at any time, for any reason.

piokoch 8 hours ago

I wonder what will happen when Jordan Bardella will be new France president and Alice Weidel will be German Chancellor. Where people are going to migrate to then...

atoav 8 hours ago

One tip in the EU is to consider just renting a Hetzner Storage Share. This is a 1TB (or more) Nextcloud that Hetzner manages for you for 5.11 Euros per month.

A Nextcloud can give you many things at once, file syncing, file shares, contact syncing, calendar syncing, etc.

I have been using this for years now after having hosted my own Nextcloud instance. The space and performance they give you for that price is unbeatable with nearly no downsides. The one downside is that you can't just ssh into the server, but you can even run occ managment commands via their web interface. It is an absolute no-brainer.

4k93n2 3 hours ago

just to piggyback off of this, theres also Pikapods (based in malta i think) that have about 100 or so self-hosted apps that can be installed with one-click and then you just pay depending on what you use. im more into self-hosting on my own hardware but its a nice option for people who want to get their feet wet or that dont have the time to manage a VPS themselves

majoe 7 hours ago

Had a self hosted nextcloud instance runnning on my homeserver, but migrated away two years ago to a Hetzner Storage share. All in all I'm quite happy with that.

There are some downsides, though:

  - No support for collabora online, so no way for collaborative editing of office files
  - Data is not encrypted

Hetzner also has classical web hosting offerings, which are cheap as well. I'm using that for email and a website of mine.

robertlagrant 8 hours ago

I had no idea how cheap this was. Thanks.

gib444 5 hours ago

I've just rented one a few days ago!

It's not a full-on Nextcloud instance, mind. For example there is no ffmpeg for generating video thumbnails.

But liking it so far

u8080 6 hours ago

Reminder: Hetzner/Linode were MITMing their client(jabber.ru) withour any legal basis and past prosecution: https://notes.valdikss.org.ru/jabber.ru-mitm/

gib444 5 hours ago

Not a fan of Mailbox.org. It's Nextcloud for starters. The UX is clunky. They feel a 30 day web app session expiry is perfectly fine.

I've gone back to FastMail for the time being

I think what I really want is:

- FastMail or similar for sending, and receiving new emails

- An email archive system that syncs from my main email provider, deleting from the remote anything over eg 4 weeks old

I like hosted providers for their IP reputation, spam systems, deliverability etc (and in the case of FM, the excellent web UI) but I don't like them having 15 years of my email which they can read whenever they wish. (edit: yes, I realise they could just keep copies)

Does anyone else have this kind of set up? Any recommendations to remove the pain of having a mailbox split into 2?

Invictus0 5 hours ago

Foolish blunder

ankit7000 7 hours ago

"Running a €5 Hetzner VPS in Helsinki for 1+ year — CPX22 gives 3vCPU 4GB RAM. For most indie devs the EU infra is genuinely better value than US providers at the same price point."

ta9000 5 hours ago

Frankly many in the US are over the Trump administration and I expect a massive backlash in the midterms. Do what you want of course but I think the descent of the US is slowing and there will be a return to normalcy after this admin.

Ylpertnodi 4 hours ago

Promise?

BoredPositron 8 hours ago

Blast from the past... I really miss fluxbox but I also need Wayland because of different refresh rate monitors and the last time I checked waybox wasn't there yet.

sph 8 hours ago

I'm also pretty much using 100% EU services except FastMail. Nothing against the Aussies, but I'd rather use something local, with servers within the EU.

But I don't think there's anything as good as Fastmail this side of the pond, and I'm not prepared to compromise on this just yet. I might self-host email despite all the dangers the day FM decides to enshittify itself.

heinrich5991 8 hours ago

I've used https://migadu.com/ before. Not EU, but EEA (Switzerland).

ktta 8 hours ago

ProtonMail? Not strictly speaking EU, but atleast EEA

It also comes with a whole suite of software that you don't have to find EU alternatives for like Calendar, Drive, Password manager, etc

sph 8 hours ago

I like privacy, but a service that's focused on maximum possible privacy for its users paints a target on its back for any three-letter agency, as it will attract a large contingent of unsavoury people.

mvdwoord 8 hours ago

I just onboarded and was dumbfounded that they do not allow for proper calendar exposure other than a fully public link! The claim of zero knowledge is super cute, for those that need it, but I need a provider which allows me to integrate the calendar elsewhere, as those will not magically move into Proton. I guess I am not in their target market.

antics9 8 hours ago

https://tuta.com/ and Protonmail

perakojotgenije 8 hours ago

https://mailbox.org/

German e-mail service

NoboruWataya 8 hours ago

Seconding this - reasonable pricing and I haven't had any issues at all with the service. I haven't used FastMail but most things I read suggest they are very similar in terms of what they offer so I would think Mailbox is a good EU alternative for someone who likes FastMail. (There are also other EU providers like Tuta but with slightly different trade-offs, ie, more emphasis on privacy but at the expense of IMAP/SMTP support.)

eigenspace 8 hours ago

I switched to mailbox recently and I'm finding it quite good. I set it up with a custom domain, and that did require a bit of fuzting around, but the friction there was almost all on the side of my VPS hosting service, not Mailbox's fault.

evan_a_a 7 hours ago

I'm using Startmail, based in NL: https://www.startmail.com

ongy 8 hours ago

I love fastmail, but I really wish they had servers close to me.

The high ping kills the throughput on davfs and makes their website hosting a pain to update :(

josephg 8 hours ago

Where abouts are you located?

ongy 25 minutes ago

yellowsir 8 hours ago

sph 3 hours ago

Not sure why I got downvoted for saying none of the dozen alternatives people have suggested are anything close to Fastmail. I guess none of you have even tried Fastmail. I am a big fan of its UI, and they have recently released and official Linux client.

gib444 5 hours ago

There are reasons other than privacy to move to non-US companies: e.g. not wanting contribute to the US economy and the further expansion of US tech companies. This is my main motivation in fact.

So criticisms about these kind of posts and initiatives along the lines of "EU privacy bad too" are insufficient and are unpersuasive.

retinaros 7 hours ago

migrating to a re gion that votes laws to restrict freedom of speech, wants to remove anonymity from social network and can block your bank account for opinions that do not align with european stance on things like for instance mass migrations from third world countries. Yeah seems a smart move.

silexia 6 hours ago

The EU has far worse freedom of speech laws than the US, most websites would be insane to migrate to the EU.

OrangePilled 4 hours ago

The people who publicize this kind of stuff are not the sort to ruffle major feathers.

surgical_fire 3 hours ago

I wonder what kind of freedom of speech you would require.

There's many a way to ruffle feathers eh?

sylware 7 hours ago

Slight detail: EU does not know how to design performant mobile/server/desktop CPUs (and GPUs). But they have ASML and "obsolete" foundries.

chupasaurus 7 hours ago

Yeah, and ARM is based outside of EU, just across La Manche and Irish Sea.

sylware 5 hours ago

One: ARM has been softbank for a good while now. And softband is japanese. Two: ARM ISA is heavily IP locked.

For the moment, would be much more appropriate to design performant implementations (mobile/server/desktop) on RISC-V ISA.

jdiaz97 7 hours ago

yeah the blog is about software, not hardware

sylware 5 hours ago

software runs on hardware.

dipshady 6 hours ago

hello

debugnik 8 hours ago

And yet the hardware had to stay all American brands, how sad we barely compete there.

dude250711 8 hours ago

That ship had sailed long ago.

_the_inflator 4 hours ago

European here.

"Migrating to the EU" is serving a self-fulfilling delusion just as joining the so -called revolutionary forces after WW2 and moving to eastern Europe.

The EU does everything to de-industrialize itself and protect its ground by using surveillance tools branded as "child protection" rules.

Europeans don't have any tradition in thinking in freedom, in civil rights, in having a state that isn't there to spoil you, but grant basic service to allow you to shape your life the way you want it. Instead, Europeans hunger for "the state", thrive under more and more "protection rules" and supervision over the economy.

Anything and everything that requires financial and economic freedom is deemed suspicious and under the disguise of equality needs to be taxed into the ground.

Almost no one takes offense by the fact that the predominant topics in the EU center around perceived life-style threads all caused by one person thousands of miles away while wondering that the quality of life and public service going down the hill and every still existing local newspaper looks like an international outlet like New York Times: local topics don't exist. Anything and everything has to be linked to something that can be linked to "the fight against XYZ" not simply pragmatism or anything rational.

In Germany there is a former major party imploding in record time, having absolutely no representation anymore. And what these radicals do, is building a self-serving kraken, that checks off any and every checkmark of an totalitarian playbook.

And this shall be the basis for making my future depend an services having to exist within these given circumstances?

The genius thing about US constitution is the inherit limitation of terms. You see exactly the opposite in anything and everything in the EU and Germany. 14 or 16+ years of being in control means there was never any need to readjust.

I am more than happy and willing to move everything out of the EU.

Given the fact that europeans think, that a "Hosted in the EU" service is 100% European (whatever the term means) is some sort of discriminatory - something that is dealing with the double standard rampant in the EU.

BTW, I am still waiting for full autonomy: nothing from Github or any open source project that traces back to Github was used in this service.

European arrogance is so disgusting. Instead of simply changing the tune and accepting the fact, that different circumstances lead to different results, there is some sort of ego distorting the decision making process.

How much more evidence is needed, that the EU is lost compared to services done in the US? And you should look at the whole picture, instead of using your gut to draw conclusions.

I admire and acknowledge anything and everything that has been achieved in the US in regards to Computer Science.

I will never ever migrate to the EU. Never.

oblio an hour ago

Linus Torvalds is Finnish.

Guido Van Rossum is Dutch.

Anders Hejlsberg is Danish.

Bjarne Stroustroup is Danish (I think?).

Rasmus Lersdorf is Danish.

Bram Molenaar was Dutch.

Edgar Dijkstra was Dutch.

Niklaus Wirth was Swiss.

Andrei Alexandrescu is Romanian.

I can probably think of many others.

The US is good at inventing things but it's amazing at marketing them and making money and drawing others to do the inventing for them.

Ylpertnodi 4 hours ago

> European here. > in Germany....

We're not all Germany over here.

drstewart 7 hours ago

Another daily thread on this topic. Interesting. What makes this one unique and not exactly like every other one?

chairhairair 8 hours ago

"This way, I can enjoy YouTube ad-free and without an account."

Not having the gumption to actually give it up. Pathetic.

lynx97 8 hours ago

I find it pretty ironical that people seem to want to move to Von der Leyens vision of the future. As a EU citizen, my trust in what recently has been going down is almost non-existant.

ludvigk 8 hours ago

I guess when the alternative is Trump's vision of the future ... - at least I know what I would choose.

CalRobert 8 hours ago

I agree, and moved to the EU from the US for related reasons, but Von der Leyen's entire strategy for handling Trump seems to be immediate capitulation to horrendously one-sided deals, which doesn't give a lot of confidence.

mytailorisrich 8 hours ago

Trump will be gone in 2028 and policies may radically change depending on who replaces him. There is no change on the horizon in the EU when Von Der Leyen is replaced (she is just the current public face of the blob...)

konradx 7 hours ago

nslsm 7 hours ago

Von der Leyen has made it clear the values of the EU are exactly the same as those of the US: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zEbQoT3Xlho

s_dev 6 hours ago

aborsy 7 hours ago

Some of these European countries such as France are quite authoritarian. They frequently pass (update: propose/push for) laws to ban VPN and even social media, request access to private messages, etc. It seems to me the situation is equally bad in EU.

9dev 7 hours ago

You have no idea what you are talking about, really. We don’t "frequently" pass such laws. Nobody is accessing private messages, even if there have been such attempts.

The EU has still the strongest privacy laws world wide, and in contrast to others a strong ethical foundation. It may be slow, it may be torn, it may be overly beaurocratic, but sure enough not authoritarian.

mytailorisrich 5 hours ago

France is routinely criticised for its police, justice system, and rule of law [1]. In general only the French believe that they are a shining beacon.

[1] https://worldjusticeproject.org/rule-of-law-index/country/Fr...

prmoustache 5 hours ago

antievropean 6 hours ago

Two words: chat control

prmoustache 5 hours ago

Aldipower 6 hours ago

gradus_ad 7 hours ago

The EU is going to fail in the next decade or two. It is a financially and politically unsustainable patchwork that will rip apart in the great power conflict that is coming. The sick man of Europe is now Europe itself.

alexejb 7 hours ago

Assuming your assessment is correct, how do you think this will affect the digital sector?

gradus_ad 6 hours ago

Capital flows to where it enjoys the greatest returns. That is not Europe, not now nor in any foreseeable future. There is no reason for a skilled professional interested in making money to go there.

alexejb 5 hours ago

Aldipower 5 hours ago