I grew up the child of an immigrant and emigrated myself, so clearly I'm not anti-immigration. When incoming streams are too large, that will drive housing prices up and wages down, that's the basic economics of supply and demand. But there are also advantages, like letting refugees flee war zones.
Also, for many people it is quite stressful when their neighborhood changes from single language to majority other language. This had happened in #Vienna neighborhoods in less than 20 years. 2/
We need to build a tolerant, anti-racist debate about #immigration, otherwise we abandon those who have experienced problems with immigration. Their only recourse is then to go to the racist politicians since they are talking about reducing immigration. There are lots of legitimate concerns about immigration, especially when the incoming streams are large or when areas newly gain a large portion of immigrants. 1/
I think it is impossible to regulate #BigTech or #gatekeepers with the current structure of #AntiTrust because it is all about pricing as if software was a commodity. Until #competition #policy takes into account #UserFreedom, it will be an extremely limited tool for dealing with problematic software companies. This is laid bare in this current case against #Google https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2023/08/google-escapes-play-store-class-action-after-finding-more-persuasive-expert/
The most promise is in #EU #DigitalMarketsAct. #FTC's & #UK's policy overhaul shows promise.
2/2
Economic analysis fails when discussing #software: economists want to think about software as a commodity, where one app is a drop in replacement for another, like buying wheat or oil from a different supplier. User-facing software is really about a culture and conversation between users and developers. Consider #Microsoft #Teams and #emacs Org-mode. This would entirely fail in either direction, the cultures are too different. Teams is for large top-down mgmt, emacs for decentralized hackers. 1/
Too often media about "#green" projects really promote some niche solutions but portray them as important pieces to solve the #Climate crisis. For example: data center waste water for lobster farms. Cool that it works. But Lobster is an expensive luxury food. This seems like the perfect product for those who don't want to feel guilty about owning a #Tesla or flying to distant eco-resorts. We need more about eating lentils and avoiding silly digital services. https://www.politico.eu/article/norway-lobster-water-green-mountain-data-farming/
If a country has labor shortages and record profits at the same time, that means the markets there are quite broken. Profit means companies have spare money to spend on things like paying workers better, so people want to take the jobs. Companies can only get away with this situation because there isn't competition there to step in.
To deliver on our mission, we are (Update 2) launching our 2023 RFP *today* - and are looking forward to proposals ranging from new original research to implementation of prior findings. Deadline for the Call is October 1st. Apply via https://fordfoundation.forms.fm/2023-digital-infrastructure-insights-fund-rfp/forms/9724 - All info below.
Statements like this make me question if #BleepingComputer is actually a useful info source:
"Since APKs downloaded from outside Google Play cannot be vetted, the best way to protect against these threats is to avoid installing Android apps from third-party sites in the first place." https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/thousands-of-android-apks-use-compression-trick-to-thwart-analysis/
#FDroid not only vets the binaries it ships, it also vets the source code. #GooglePlay is not the safest source of apps on #Android.
Google's new Takeout interface (see image). Good stuff: allows storing the data in other non-Drive services (Box, Dropbox), periodic exports, granular selection of data, good coverage of common formats. Bad stuff: still no actual portability through interoperability - you cannot do service-to-service transfer.
For @edri I've recently written a comment about the @EU_Commission's #DSA Stakeholder Event in July and what the #EU should do *right now* to start enforce the #DigitalMarketsAct and the #DigitalServicesAct.
https://edri.org/our-work/regulating-big-tech-in-europe-with-the-digital-services-act-digital-markets-act/ #DMA #PlatformRegulation #gafam #bigtech
If #Facebook is officially designated a gatekeeper under the #DigitalMarketsAct this September, by March 2024 we're supposed to see «a reference offer laying down the technical details and general terms and conditions of interoperability»: art. 7(4).
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/1925/oj#007.004
It will be interesting to see what role, if any, #Threads will have in it.
The #DMA is the official reason to not launch it in the #EU, per Bloomberg News https://mastodon.social/@fediversereport/110661982620933580 and Mosseri on Verge.
From today on the English version of "Ada & #Zangemann - A Tale of Software, Skateboards, and Raspberry Ice Cream" should be available from your preferred book store world-wide with the ISBN 978-1-718-50320-5 or directly from the publisher #nostarchpress
Your help sharing your thoughts about the book with others in different channels would be highly appreciated.
On the public #Weblate, mystery accounts are creating Old English (ang) and Middle English (enm) in the #FDroid projects. They don't respond to my messages, or do any translation work. This makes me suspect foul play. Anyone have any ideas?
For example:
* https://hosted.weblate.org/projects/f-droid/-/ang/
* https://hosted.weblate.org/projects/f-droid/-/enm/
The main #Jitsi public instance https://meet.jit.si is now requiring logging in with a Google, Facebook or GitHub account in order to create new rooms. https://jitsi.org/blog/authentication-on-meet-jit-si/
Apparently they feel that there was too much abuse of their terms of service, but they do not give any details at all.
A strong example of this comes from navigating with apps in Austria. Apps like #OrganicMaps #OsmAnd and others that use #OpenStreetMap data have much better information on footpaths, bike lanes, and minor roads than #Google does. So often my preferred route is entirely absent in Google Maps. On the other hand, Google Maps sometimes has more information on shops, offices, restaurants, etc. Other apps have much better transit information. Yet many stay in the Google bubble because of this bias 2/
When discussing #Google alternatives for #privacy, I heard: "I tried X a couple times but it didn't give me the results I wanted but Google did, so I stay there". I use multiple search engines and see each one's strengths and weaknesses. This made me realize there is a kind of bias: using one service provides simplicity. When using one, we don't know when that it is providing worse results than alternatives. Then people get the impression "the alternative sucks, I'll stick with the good one" 1/
Travelling by train in Europe should be silky smooth.
From pan-European corridors to interregional connections, we have helped build greener and sustainable ways into #Europe.
And we are up for more:
🚊 Today, we earmarked more than €52 million to support the purchase of 37 electric #trains for 13 interregional routes in Romania.
🚆 This month, we allocated €411 million to help build two sections of Spain’s Murcia-Almería high-speed railway.
Discover more: https://europa.eu/!J6DBmw