General-purpose OS, special-purpose OS, and now: vendor-purpose OS
So suddenly there’s a lot of attention around email and it’s exposing how many people in the web community still use Gmail. Like actually trust all your personal information and communication (and that of your potentially marginalised or vulnerable contacts) with Google. 🤮
There are a lot of hard problems and lack of alternatives when it comes to rights-respecting technology. But email (as imperfect as it is) has a fair few affordable alternative providers. Small change, big difference.
@tinfoil_hat@fosstodon.org I voted no, because I don't trust the reliability of the applications. The granularity of location services isn't sufficient, nor can such applications detect barriers such as walls.
I fear that such devices would simultaneously:
a) Have too many false positives
b) Give people a false sense of security, leading to unsafe gathering practices
RT @MarkoSaric@twitter.com
New post: How to pay your rent with your open source project
Including @Ghost@twitter.com, @discourse@twitter.com, @matrixdotorg@twitter.com, @gitlab@twitter.com and other great, sustainable open source products.
https://plausible.io/blog/open-source-funding
🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/MarkoSaric/status/1273613098956599302
@amolith I voted "Link to it" as I believe that would give better exposure to his PeerTube channel, and PeerTube itself in general.
I appreciated this video because he is articulate, insightful, and talks about how to improve the world in a more subtle way than you may have heard before.
This is the kind of git commit messages I would like to write: https://dhwthompson.com/2019/my-favourite-git-commit
@aral @dsfgs It's a tough one. The likes of Twitter and Facebook might be able to hire enough moderators to get libel (etc) taken down. but small "social media" platforms (like Mastodon) wouldn't really be able to keep up. In theory, 230 helps protect those little guys. In practice, it unfortunately allows the big guys to get away with too much.
I totally agree that individually owned and controlled spaces is the ultimate answer. The road to get there for non-techies isn't clear to me ... yet.
@dsfgs @aral There are better definitions at the EFF -- https://www.eff.org/search/site/230 -- but the tl;dr is that it is a US law that basically says that the company that host content are not liable for what that content says.
In other words, if I post libel on Twitter, you can bring legal action against me, but you can't bring that legal action against Twitter.
Wait, what's that? An 8GB version of the Pi 4?!
Sweet 😊
https://www.raspberrypi.org/blog/8gb-raspberry-pi-4-on-sale-now-at-75/
Need to send encrypted emails? #Nextcloud mail uses browser add-in Mailvelope for this, and the latest Mail release improves the integration of this add-in.
https://blog.wuc.me/2020/05/18/nextcloud-mail-mailvelope-refined.html
Nice to see NixNet's Searx instance up and running! Thanks @amolith 😄
Donate to help keep their services online: https://nixnet.services/support/?project=1
Announcing the SourceHut project hub 🎉
https://sourcehut.org/blog/2020-04-30-the-sourcehut-hub-is-live/
I don't usually explicitly ask for shares, but this is a big deal for SourceHut - the project hub solves one of our major goals for the alpha. Please help spread the word ❤️
“Getting Started with WireGuard” https://dev.to/miguelmota/getting-started-with-wireguard-n9e (https://v2.jacky.wtf/post/a61935bd-92d9-4607-9642-f7df8add85ec)
@amolith Following the "Learn about the 1.0 Release" link on their homepage, the even more interesting part is Open VSX ( https://github.com/eclipse/openvsx ) as an alternative to the walled-garden Visual Studio Marketplace.