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Zoom now wants you to focus on Section 10 of their ToS which they've changed today to say they won't use your calls and other data to train their AI models. Instead, focus on Section 15. Zoom (like most Big Tech ToSs) can change those terms at any time.

They laughably say you should "regularly check" their legal pages for those notices and if you don't but keep using the services you've agreed to the changes. These services are unethically deployed technology at their most fundamental level.

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Regular reminder: if your site or app doesn’t work in Firefox, it’s broken.

I lived through the “this site requires and/or is best in IE” era, and I’d rather burn it all down than return to that.

Pro-tip: Firefox does most things better anyway. Give it a spin and enjoy a less-tracked web.

keverets boosted

As ever, disregard what a company says publicly and focus on what the legal documents says you are agreeing to when you use their product.

theverge.com/2023/8/7/23822907

keverets boosted

When you think, do you have an internal dialogue that includes words?

Boost if you're interested.

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Ages when you’re in your prime: 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97, 101, 103, 107, 109

keverets boosted

Zoom's terms of service now include training GenAI with no ability to opt out

Check section 10.2 Service Generated Data; Consent to Use.

explore.zoom.us/en/terms/

keverets boosted

When reviewing apps, F-Droid takes the user’s point of view, first and foremost.

Various apps have features that are not in our users' interest but that don't make them ineligible for inclusion, like tracking or using non-free network services. Which is why we clearly mark apps that have these "Anti-Features", so that users are able to make an informed choice whether they find those acceptable or not.

The latest version of the F-Droid client is now able to show a description explaining why an app has a specific Anti-Feature, so users don't need to find that information elsewhere to make an informed decision.

And thanks to the hard work of @IzzyOnDroid over the last few days, we now have those descriptions for many apps in our repository, so the client actually has something to show the user.

#FDroid

f-droid.org/docs/Anti-Features

keverets boosted

"Getting rid of physical books because we now have databases is like getting rid of sunshine because of the existence of vitamin-D pills and cod liver oil." --love that.

a cogent plea for keeping physical libraries available:

scottlocklin.wordpress.com/202

keverets boosted

In /e/OS, we are replacing the Mapbox Maps SDK, that is not open source anymore, by the @maplibre SDK! 🗾

We will also switch to @stadiamaps tiles.

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If you are horrified by the Web Environment Integrity proposal by Google (#DRM for ads), stop using Chrome and switch to Firefox and block ads everywhere.

The only eyeballs left for Google to show ads are the ones protected by ad blockers. That’s the highest growth opportunity they have, and we cannot let them have it.

keverets boosted

and now that every web browser (except Firefox) is Chrome with a new coat of paint, we see Google beginning to turn the screws.

packmates.org/@gsderp/11074112

Going to try storing fruit & veggies in the fridge door to reduce waste. Not as efficient in some ways, but much more in others.

Suggested by cbc.ca/listen/cbc-podcasts/139

keverets boosted

Reasons for historians to be concerned about Threads winning and killing Twitter: Twitter provides access for the Internet Archive and allowed my project full access to download up to 10 million Tweets a month related to COVID and Saskatchewan. Facebook and Instagram block the Internet Archive and don’t provide access to academics. Twitter owned by Musk is terrible and not currently providing access for new Academic projects, but Meta is also really bad for archiving.

@Anarcat @murena @e_mydata @gael @fairphone @fairphoneaachen I'm using the Fairphone 4 in Canada, and have tried a few different providers (Fido, Freedom, Telus), all of which worked as expected for data. Can you describe more about the issue you were having?

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@delta @eighthave as mentioned in the other subthread, Slack does this. It remains unread until that chat/thread is entered again. There are some quirks to it. Sometimes things seem to stay "unread" when they shouldn't or return to "read" when they shouldn't, but on the whole it's not a terrible UX. Handling edge cases may be tricky, but its achievable.

keverets boosted

One of the biggest sighs of relief I've had recently is hearing @doctorow say that podcasts are still resilient against . I had great fears that 's attempt to do so by paying Joe Rogan $100mil would be successful, but apparently, Cory Doctorow considers that attempt to be a failure. It is at least clear that Apple's efforts there have failed over the years. wnycstudios.org/podcasts/otm/s

keverets boosted

It’s still a BIG problem that because of car manufacturing influence, most media & political energy goes to EVs, with not NEARLY enough going to fewer cars/less driving. But the priority HAS to be the latter, the part of the solution that will actually do much more public good. #EV #ElectricVehicles #cars #cities

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