More fun with #DigitalMarketsAct meetings! This time I'm in some meetings organized by the European Commission, run by a super expensive, multi-national consultancy. We are in with well paid representatives of #BigTech, some academics, and a couple public interest techies like me. Volunteers like me are again driving the key points that will make or break the #DMA. I applied to #FordFoundation to fund our work, but was rejected. How can we in the #EU get more people paid to represent users?
@a_sator Es gibt eh schon zu viel Bodenversiegelung und Bodenverbrauch in Österreich.
Enforcing #FreeSoftware via contracts rather than licenses is an interesting idea:
https://www.linux-magazine.com/Online/Features/A-Post-Open-World
@sabreW4K3 @fdroidorg Mostly it is just luck, there isn't any preferencing, if that's what you mean. Bigger, more complicated apps are more likely to run into build problems, that's another factor.
@guardianproject FYI a big portion of the work this position will handle will be directly supporting #FDroid, including grants and admin work. #FreeSoftwareJobs
"#FreeSoftware compete with big tech (gatekeepers) not in scale but in principle by providing to end-users curated solutions that respect their rights. #DMA is important for non-profit as well"
@fsfe at the Digital Markets Conference
European Competition Network's #DMA conference summarized how our digital infrastructure is working, e.g.
"The narrative of #security excuse, which is so often used by big tech players, is a self-serving story created by the incumbents who have the ability to solve incredibly complicated technical problems. Security solutions are not intractable and do not prevent compliance. Once security is taken care of, consumers obviously like choice"
https://www.acm.nl/en/publications/ecn-digital-markets-act-conference-2024
The CIA has a long track record, documented from their own archives and elsewhere, of breaking just laws about torture, kidnapping, murder, due process, etc. On top of that, they have built a system to ensure they rarely have to face the consequences. 4/4
#DarkNetDiaries 113 makes a very dangerous conclusion that sometimes governments need to break the law. In many countries, the law is the law, and there are no exceptions. I'm fortunate to live in one: Austria. The US Constitution does not say that the government can break the law for security reasons. The US executive branch decided that, and the checks and balances are failing. The right standard comes from MLK Jr: people should break unjust law, but accept the consequences. 3/
The #CIA has a well documented, decades-long history of using coercion and even murder, from Abu Ghraib to the Korean War. If you want extensive detail, see the National Security Archive. Or a great book on the topic is Killing Hope, by William Blum. The CIA even hosts a free PDF of the book, if you trust downloads from them ;-) https://www.cia.gov/library/abbottabad-compound/13/130AEF1531746AAD6AC03EF59F91E1A1_Killing_Hope_Blum_William.pdf 2/
The #CIA is doing more PR these days, like putting up agents for interviews on popular podcasts where the interviewer won't contradict their #spin or even outright lies, like "the CIA does not spy on Americans". I heard a clear example of this on #DarkNetDiaries episode 116 Mad Dog, where the agent said the CIA doesn't typically use coercion. The key spin word is "typically". Most agents are paper pushers, so they aren't torturing, but the CIA does regularly and frequently torture people 1/
We have a new blog post about the Mobifree project and our role in it.
In short, it's a human-centered, ethical alternative, that champions privacy over profit and believes in collaboration, sustainability and inclusiveness.
@bene64 @newhinton @fdroidorg For example: privacy, data protection, and decentralization are all topics NLnet funds. Censorship circumvention is not. 2/
@bene64 @newhinton @fdroidorg If you've never done any grants before, start small. NLnet is quite flexible, so think of a feature that think is important, then name a fixed price you'd be willing to implement it. Then tell the story in terms of how it will benefit EU users. It is an EU fund focused on EU citizens, so that use case is what they need to hear about. It is all free software. And it is also good if it would benefit other users outside of the EU. That just can't be the focus. 1/
Friendly reminder if you're an open source developer in the mobile ecosystem:
You still have time until 1st of June to apply for a #mobifree grant.
Looks like #Israel will pass a key point in its war on #Hamas: its own response will kill more of their own people than the original attack. This already happened long ago for #Hamas, more were killed in this war than all since 1948. The #US lost more of its own people in the wars of #Iraq and #Afghanistan than in the Sept 11th attacks. These facts clearly demonstrate who gains from these kinds of wars. The leaders who drive them do so to stay in power, not to serve their people interests.
@IzzyOnDroid in the F-Droid dev collection of roughly 260,000 APKs, both proper apps and malware, I have not found any that matches those conditions. If anyone knows of any, please post out!