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provides an alternate model that fits better: fund essential free software from taxes, which companies cannot avoid paying, then everyone gets the benefits without worrying about sustainability. Kudos to Red Hat for making a market-driven approach work as well as it has for decades, but it is clearly not the best solution for funding infrastructural software.

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At the same time, RedHat has been a major funder of free software development, with key contributions to GNOME, Linux, GNU and more. Oracle is very unlikely to contribute anything near those levels, yet Oracle is a thread to RHEL. The non-profit RHEL forks might be able to raise real amounts of dev funding, but as much as I like that model, it is far from proven.

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Markets are a useful tool but they are not always the best tool for sustainable funding. 's recent decision to restrict access to source code provides a good example of that. via RHEL is the foundation for so many large companies but market-driven companies work to avoid paying for anything extra, even when they clearly benefit from it.

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's policy of sharing source code with paying subscribers highlights the key differences between and thinking. Free Software focuses on and users have that since it includes source code. focuses on business model freedom, where companies are free to do whatever with the source code, including taking it proprietary and restricting the user. RedHat behaves Open Source, adding restrictions where it can.

sfconservancy.org/blog/2023/ju

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Last May, for the first time, we generated more electricity from wind and solar than from fossil fuels.

Renewable energy is homegrown and creates high-quality green jobs in our Union.

On the#InternationalDayofCleanEnergy, we reaffirm our commitment to accelerate the clean energy transition and strengthen our energy independence ↓

#EUDelivers

The promise of USB-C is huge: standard plug for everything including charging, devices sharing power with each other, all the things over a single port. But wow, it is buggy compared to the old USB days. Like sometimes, devices just decide not to charge from a given USB-C connection. Hopefully this can still be improved, and USB-C doesn't turn out like , where almost everyone feels like it regularly pranks them. I guess that's why there are still so many devices with headphone jacks

I am again trying to set an (opt-in) open book exam with the whole Internet being allowed as a tool for students during the exam (just no other persons to collaborate with). While Bard is getting a lot better at mathematical/logical examples compared to the (free version of) ChatGPT, both are still really bad at text comprehension mixed in with logical reasoning. To my students: Yes, some of these questions will results in confused answers when simply pasted into the LLMs - please still engage your own thinking processes!

In my experience, the best UX for consistency and flow was Mac OS X circa 2008. Back then, was moving more towards and had gotten really good at defining Human Interface Guidelines and getting developers to follow them. Basically all the apps I used had the same UX for the core things (key commands, open/save dialogs, window management, etc). Then they got distracted by iTunes and shifted to working on devices that prioritize consuming rather than creating.
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The situation on desktops regularly pisses me off: desktop apps technically are much better suited to providing a system-wide, consistent and easy UX. But means that all the money for development is going to the web, where tracking is built in and each site defines its own core UX patterns. So now the desktop can't keep up in terms of developer time, and sadly the web is often easier. 1/

With all this news about doing layoffs because they are replacing people with , I wonder if that is actually PR spin and what is actually happening is all the actions are actually biting the monopolists where it hurts: their bottom line

This week in F-Droid (TWIF) was published again.

We have a lot of information in it, so jump right in: f-droid.org/2024/01/25/twif.ht

In short:

- FOSDEM is around the corner.
- We specifically talk about the following apps: Money Manager Ex, Open Video Editor, Tachiyomi, Fossify Phone, KOReader, OnionShare, Organic Maps and OsmAnd~.
- The spring-cleaning of our repo is underway, and we have found some proprietary dependencies. The affected versions were removed.

#FDroid

Court ruling rejects spyware vendor’s motion to dismiss lawsuit filed by Apple. Judge says anti-hacking laws fits #Pegasus case „to a T“. #NSOGroup will fight on theregister.com/2024/01/24/us_ #Staatstrojaner

Fun fact: it's data privacy week 🔒 so here are some of our favorite extensions for a safer online experience.

1. Multi-account containers! cookies are separated by container, so you can use multiple accounts at the same time.

2. Privacy badger: this extension automatically blocks invisible trackers and opts you out of data sharing & selling.

3. History cleaner: this deletes browsing history older than a specified number of days 👀

Which ones are you currently using?

I like to think about little hacks to increase my while working on code. Lots of build systems fetch all sorts of things from the network, and send all sorts of data. , , and others have opt-out tracking. One little hack I have going is to force to fetch dependencies over (except from which blocks Tor). gitlab.com/-/snippets/3642145

This week in F-Droid (TWIF) with news about following apps was published:

- Element with an update and a fix for a critical bug
- The Fossify fork of Simple Mobile Tools has now 2 additional apps: File Manager and Calendar
- Kore was downgraded due to a non FOSS dependency
- Transportr is back after more than a year

Also, we've had 8 more new apps, 2 removed ones and 150 updated apps.

f-droid.org/2024/01/18/twif.ht

#FDroid

We have defined a secure and usable architecture for decentralized package repositories that any mobile user can use and understand possible risks.

The next official release of the official F-Droid client will widely deploy this to our users. We then plan to make a final architecture document, so others can understand the whole model.

We would love any kind of feedback, our drafts are here: gitlab.com/fdroid/wiki/-/wikis

Large corporations like the hate on the even though it has brought them big benefits. would be nowhere near what it is without the GPL. I always saw 's kernel as their effort to get out of the GPL, since it would replace the Linux kernel. There was even media hype to that effect. Now I'm happy to see that Google is no longer supporting on Fuchsia. I see this as a win for

9to5google.com/2024/01/15/goog

Its cool to see more and more apps using . It used to be so many apps just used for maps and then just failed on devices. For example, I just downloaded a city's bike sharing app made by a mega corp, and it uses MabLibre so works fine without Play Services. My experience used to be that all the navigation apps required Google.

I live near a branch of the and have seen beavers a couple of times. It is great to see them coming back. I didn't realize how dire the situation was: the population was done to 1200 a century ago cartographymaster.eu/wp-conten

Ok, my final struggle was getting to switch to the new . It seems that GnuPG was architected around a single smartcard per private key. Seems fine as a recommendation, but problematic as a strict requirement. It seems that GnuPG 2.4 has changed this, but I don't know the details.

Here's my switch scripted hack:
gitlab.com/-/snippets/3638931

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