Perhaps this is true in the context of the web. But I got tired of watching the web as a platform continuously repeat the same mistakes so I started working on something different. In the last day or two I was finally able to functionally prove my competing idea in a way that forcefully imposes privacy with complete Zero Trust conformance.
But it didn't. It just forced governments to reveal the existing lack of privacy.
The author thinks that you are more free if you face the wall, so you don't see the bars of your jail cell. SSL that forces a government root of trust on you is still an improvement, because it reveals what the government was already doing, and it limits surveillance to only the government.
https://github.com/prettydiff/share-file-systems/blob/master...