[-] [email protected] 1 points 3 weeks ago

Slrpnk and lemmy in general is just a bunch of yuppies.

2
submitted 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Reticulum is an elegant engineers approach to networking. It’s a complete replacement of the network stack, it’s entirely encrypted, and can communicate and can correctly organize global-scale mesh-networks over any connection >5b/s without the need for distributed hash tables, or any resource usage besides bandwidth. This makes it far lighter than GNUnet, and friendly to low-power, low bandwidth, embedded networks and devices.

This makes it viable as a global network, as it is super cheap to interact with. And it can run on any device, including your smartphone natively.

Bandwidth is a physical resource of the natural world. Reticulum is based on the principle of creating systems that (as far as is possible for a computer program) understand the physical limits of real-world resources, and manages them responsibly and intelligently, with well-thought out algorithms.

When that is ultimately not possible any more, human beings have to step in and expand capacity or make other thoughtful decisions on how to manage the available resources. I believe this is the most efficient, holistic and human-friendly approach to creating technologies that actually help us and better our lives.

  • someone from forums
[-] [email protected] 6 points 1 month ago

Murder isn’t a job

[-] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Gnunet aims to replace the internet on all levels. This is the low level of that.

This could form a network with local peers in a secure private internet over bluetooth LE, which could also connect to a broader network through some nodes having internet access.

I'm hoping to integrate LORA mesh networks with satellite nodes for completely FOSS, indestructible, resilient, resistance internet.

36
submitted 1 month ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

(Teaser)

1. Introduction

This specification describes the protocol of R5N. R5N is a Distributed Hash Table (DHT). The name is an acronym for "randomized recursive routing for restricted-route networks".

The core idea behind R5N is to combine a randomized routing algorithm with an efficient, deterministic closest-peer algorithm. This allows us to construct an algorithm that is able to escape and circumvent restricted route environments while at the same time allow for a logarithmically bounded routing complexity.

1.2. System Model

DHTs usually operate as overlay networks consisting of peers communicating over the existing Internet. Hence canonical DHT designs often assume that the IP protocol provides the peers of the overlay with unrestricted end-to-end pairwise connectivity. However, in practice firewalls and network address translation (NAT) [RFC2663] make it difficult for peers operating on consumer end-devices to directly communicate, especially in the absence of core network infrastructure enabling NAT traversal via protocols such as interactive connectivity establishment (ICE) [RFC5245].

Furthermore, not all peer-to-peer networks consistently operate over the Internet, such as mobile ad-hoc networks (MANETs). While routing protocols have been designed for such networks ([RFC3561]) these generally have issues with security in the presence of malicious participants, as they vulnerable to impersonation attacks. The usual solution to these issues is to assert that the entire MANET is a closed network and to require authentication on all control messages. In contrast, the system model for R5N is that of an open network without any kind of authorities that could restrict access only to trusted participants.

1.3. Security Model

We assume that the network is open and thus a fraction of the participating peers is malicious. Malicious peers may create, alter, delay or drop messages. We also assume that an adversary can control (or fake) many peers [Sybil], thus any kind of voting or punishment of malicious peers would be rather pointless.

Honest peers are expected to establish and maintain many connections. We assume that as a result the adversary is generally unable to prevent honest peers from maintaining a sufficient number of direct connections with other honest peers to achieve acceptable performance. As the number of malicious peers and their connections increases, performance of the system should gracefully degrade, and only collapse for peers that an adversary has fully isolated from the benign network.

[-] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

This is a critique of online shoplifting "culture" which is so utterly and profoundly eyewatteringly yuppy liberal white kids getting kicks. Shoplifting doesn't give me a rush, and I don't want it too. Same with pickpocketing, or honestly dealing.

It's quite literally just a part of life, normal, it's something that basically everyone does. It seems so fuckin odd to draw attention to it. It's not called "shoplifting", it's called "racking". You sound like an undercover cop. This whole place does. It feels like this place is cops parodying what they think shoplifters are like.

Revolutionary actions lead to tangible revolution or liberation. If you don't see the slave freed, or the structure destroyed, then you did nothing.

Militant resistance to the IDF is revolutionary. Directly liberating animals from testing labs is revolutionary. Hamas is revolutionary. The black panthers are revolutionary. Calling shoplifting revolutionary is like calling boycotting revolutionary just serves to make people complacent in a similar fashion to liberalism. Your not going to boycott capitalisim to death.

13
submitted 1 month ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I shoplift to survive, it’s not like a hobby, there’s nothing revolutionary about not paying for shit. Walmart will continue to exist. If its existence was ever genuinely threatened, they would put cops at every entrance and fuckin chase you hard. Seeing people roleplay like they are some master criminals for lifting some potato chips just throws me off kilter. Lifting is badass but there’s nothing revolutionary about it. I do it so I can afford food.

boxy

joined 2 months ago