Thx see my other reply. The problem was "sleep mode" adding mute ontop of DND.
Ohh
Thx... I think I got it. I use "sleep mode" sleep mode turns on DND and also mutes the phone. So I need to remove the muting.
Srry and thanks

Fedora har the same free software ethos. You can enable varies various not free repos, just like in debian. I doubt it's a real problem? Might just have been lucky.
To be explicit. If its not e2e, it's sent and recieved and logged in plaintext. Tuta can opt to encrypt it, then store it, after the fact. But you cant verify that they do. Even though they claim to. Only messages (which is not mail) between tuta customers are e2e as i understand it.
Use signal. (Or for mail: i am going to shill purelymail which is awesome)
My 6430 is chugging along as a nas on its 8 th year+ after being discontinued as daily workhorse. Running 24/7.
Ok thanks. "Even MIT" is something i agree on. And the author decides of course. But this means that big corp can 'steal' the code. It also means you can build extensions and other stuff that are not MIT. And then it gets muddy.
Anyways didnt mean to make this about license. Sorry.
No... But i've thought about how easy it would be to implement in ebooks and pdfs (e.g. my daily newspaper i can download as pdf). I've thought about this when sailing the high seas.
Is it a thing?
If i remember correctly sone tokens it can't read? Cant backup? Clunky interface? I looked at it, but decided against it.
For me aegis is by far the best. Simple. Encrypted. Backup. It's saved to a syncthing folder. Passwords are in bitwarden for simpme stuff but keepassxc is great. And also synced via syncthing.


As a parent who dont like id requirements but who also wants my children away from social media, this is my take:
Social tech does not require a tech solution, but instead a social solution, because social media is a social problem. My children has restricted access, no accounts etc. But that helps little when all the other parents believe social media to be fine. A law clearly sets a social norm, which apparently 30 % of parents understand.