Man, everywhere you turn, someone's riding Elon's dick. FFS.
BootlegHermit
I get it, my cats are my biggest source of garbage/waste in my own household, and I wouldn't give 'em up for anything. But when facing a problem, sometimes you have to weigh options you'd rather not consider.
Buy less useless shit. Less food deliveries, less "prepared" foods, less "made of the finest chinesium and thaitanium" products. Spend the extra buck for something that you'll get more than one use out of. Adopt out the cats if you really want to reduce the amount of garbage. They're a primary source of all that trash - food packaging, cleaning up their shit, all their fur...
Then of course there's the obvious "sort your shit - recycle what you can, compost what you can".
I find that most VPNs are so heavily shilled that by that very nature, makes them suspect. Since the days of Napster, WinMX, Bearshare and the like, I've gotten exactly 2 "Hey, knock it off" letters from my ISP. And they were both from new-release, mouse-affiliated movie releases from a public tracker.
Get in with some of the private trackers and 99.9% of the worry disappears. Try not to upload terabytes of data, and the majority of ISPs (I mean, two of the 3 that seem to have the monopolies at least) wont even bother sending the notices.
Hopefully it's a fight to the death. Loser's assets get donated to a good cause. Winner faces whatever other egomaniac wants to use their wealth to shit on the rest of humanity.
The battle ends when the last man standing has a net worth of less than $10 million.
Even then, there's the theory/circumstantial "evidence" that Google's indexing is a big farce. Forgot where I saw the video, but someone pointed out that the average person only relies on the 1st page or two of search results. To try to go beyond that, most searches very quickly drop from "millions of results" down to a few hundred/thousand at best. Going beyond the first couple of search result pages, the page count seemingly drops off a cliff.
However, there are independent engines out there. The first one that pops to mind is Gigablast, which does it's own indexing/crawling.
If you've got some time to kill, check out some stuff related to the "Dead Internet Theory". While I cant say how accurate the information presented may be, it certainly opens up the idea that there's something funky about the internet and how we perceive it.
"as well as — scarily — diseases such as COVID-19, hepatitis, herpes and more."
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