diff --git a/content/posts/nophones/index.md b/content/posts/nophones/index.md index 7c31499..89c4cec 100644 --- a/content/posts/nophones/index.md +++ b/content/posts/nophones/index.md @@ -48,7 +48,7 @@ You may choose to live without phones entirely, if you don't feel that you need Many bureaucratic institutions that we are forced to deal with make it difficult to live without a phone: health care, banking, etc. Communicating with bureaucracies doesn't need to be encrypted, so you can use a [Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)](/glossary#voip-voice-over-internet-protocol) application. This allows you to make phone calls over the Internet rather than through cell towers. -Any VoIP application that is available on a computer is asynchronous because it doesn't ring when the computer is off — you rely on the voicemail feature to return missed calls. For example, a service like [jmp.chat](https://www.kicksecure.com/wiki/Mobile_Phone_Security#Phone_Number_Registration_Unlinked_to_SIM_Card) gives you a VoIP number, which you can pay for in cryptocurrency, and you make calls using an XMPP application — [Cheogram](https://cheogram.com/) works well. +Any VoIP application that is available on a computer is asynchronous because it doesn't ring when the computer is off — you rely on the voicemail feature to return missed calls. For example, a service like [jmp.chat](https://www.kicksecure.com/wiki/Mobile_Phone_Security#Phone_Number_Registration_Unlinked_to_SIM_Card) gives you a VoIP number, which you can pay for in Bitcoin, and you make calls using an XMPP application — [Cheogram](https://cheogram.com/) works well. Though usually more expensive than VoIP, a flip phone or landline also works well for making and receiving 'bureaucratic' calls from home, like those mentioned above.