KelsonV

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 18 points 9 months ago

Someone's concern for privacy can change throughout the day or at different locations. To keep the metaphor going, they might be fine with the top being open while they're driving, but want it closed when the car is parked.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 9 months ago

Same here. The learning curve is higher on Vespucci, but once you're familiar with it it's extremely capable!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

Not sure how you get from Fediverse people researching what server admin/moderation structures work well and which ones don't to CIA censorship.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago

I use Nextcloud Notes and Tasks extensively.

Notes is kind of bare-bones compared to Carnet, which is more like Google Keep, but it's fast, syncs with its own Android app, and stores notes as regular files in your Nextcloud folder so you can use any text editor with them.

Tasks hooks into the calendar system and can sync with anything that supports CalDAV. I use Davx5 to sync it (along with my calendars and contacts) to my phone, where I use OpenTasks to actually manage my to-do list. The only problem I have with it is that it doesn't support recurring tasks very well. I've sort of managed to work around that by syncing with Thunderbird, which lets me create recurring tasks in the underlying calendar data.

[–] [email protected] 15 points 10 months ago (3 children)
  • Dropped Reddit and Twitter completely. Actually deleted my Reddit account and deleted most of my Twitter history.
  • Stopped using Gmail as my primary email.
  • Went back to DVD and Blu-Ray for shows and movies I think I might want to rewatch.
  • Slowly importing stuff I've posted on various social media to my website.
  • Slowly moving stuff off of Google Drive and Dropbox to my local PC and/or Nextcloud.
  • Finally set up my Nextcloud server to use object storage so I can use it for auto-uploads without worrying about space.
  • Tried out a bunch of different Fediverse platforms.
  • Made more of an effort to report bugs instead of just living with them or using something else.
  • Deleted Chrome as my secondary browser and installed Vivaldi. (I've been using Firefox as my primary for a while.)

Moving stuff is slow because I don't want to just copy it all over, I want to decide what to keep in the process.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 10 months ago

Wow, imagine how upset they'd be if they listened to the rest of the lyrics!

 

"Like so many applications of AI, this new power is likely to be a double-edged sword: It may help people identify the locations of old snapshots from relatives, or allow field biologists to conduct rapid surveys of entire regions for invasive plant species, to name but a few of many likely beneficial applications.

"But it also could be used to expose information about individuals that they never intended to share, says Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst at the American Civil Liberties Union who studies technology. Stanley worries that similar technology, which he feels will almost certainly become widely available, could be used for government surveillance, corporate tracking or even stalking."

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

"What would incentivise companies to use it over a regular website with tracking and whatnot?"

Nothing...and that's kinda the point.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Oh geez, thinking back to the "we had it first!" wars between Opera fans and Firefox fans about tabs back in the pre-Chrome days...

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Firefox, and Vivaldi for the occasional site that doesn't work on Gecko. (They're built on the Chromium engine, but absolutely refusing to implement this crap)

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

"the private enforcement mechanism" -- which is essentially an end run around restrictions on what the government is technically not allowed to do itself, by heavily implying that they want something done instead of explicitly hiring someone to do it. "Will no one rid me of this meddlesome priest?"

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

[citation needed]

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

....decided what they want the outcome to be, and formulates some kind of argument that results in that outcome

You might say his results were...predetermined

 

Too narrow, hidden, minimal feedback...

 

Murena is launching a smartphone with physical switches to turn off the camera, microphone and network.

 

"The only difference between programming and games is that games have win conditions."

 

My Nextcloud instance runs reasonably well on the server side, and my desktop and phone are able to render the web UI reasonably fast when I want to...but I also have a tablet with slow hardware and wifi that is just unusably slow with the Nextcloud web UI. Like, it'll take multiple seconds to render the login page, but only on this one device.

Does anyone know of an alternative web UI for Nextcloud that's optimized for downloading and rendering on slow connections/hardware?

Edit: I'm already using Nextcloud, and I'm using it for quite a few different services, some of which have native apps available, some of which don't, and of course even when an app is available, not all the features are implemented in it. The specific device I'm dealing with here is a Linux tablet, so while I can use native desktop applications for some features, it's not like it can just run Android apps. But the problem would apply to any comparably low-powered hardware like, say, an old laptop that can run native apps and efficiently-designed web applications well enough, but struggles with modern throw-a-million-javascript-libraries-at-it web development.

 

DSN needs more bandwidth to handle everything they want to throw at it, but isn't getting the budget

 

Does this mean we can finally stop using these barriers to accessibility?

 

STS (Secure Time Seeding) uses server time from SSL handshakes, which is fine when talking to other Microsoft servers, but other implementations put random data in that field to prevent fingerprinting.

 

I'm getting Cloudflare's JavaScript-based screening page when trying to hit tinyurl.com with curl and extract the real link. Anyone know if this has been going on for a while?

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