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“Your driving data goes to a half a dozen companies you’ve never even heard of for reasons you’d perhaps never agree to if asked directly,” EFF’s @Thorin told @ConsumerReports. consumerreports.org/electronic

Investigating journalists for accurately reporting comments critical of the Dear Leader is something we used to expect from North Korea, Iran, and Russia, not the United States.

nytimes.com/2025/02/28/busines

I guess with the recent Mozilla terms changes, we can now say that Netscape has come full circle.

I don't really know how to shout this from the rooftops any louder: If this actually happens, it would spell the end of U.S. numerical weather prediction--the scientific models, run on supercomputers, used to create virtually all weather forecasts. axios.com/2025/03/03/doge-noaa

Hearing someone unironically refer to the US and Western Europe as "The Free World" is just hilarious.

I keep reading that #China (murderous dictatorship) is the world's biggest carbon emitter per nation. This is true but irrelevant. The number we should look at is carbon emissions *per capita*. Here are the top ten in 2023:

* Palau
* Qatar
* Kuwait
* Brunei
* New Caledonia
* Bahrain
* United Arab Emirates
* Trinidad and Tobago
* Gibraltar
* Saudi Arabia

It's the Arabian peninsula, people. China is doing better than Canada, Russia, Australia and the US.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_

#co2 #climate

Ah, Trump just paused all military aid to Ukraine, lifted sanctions on Russia, cancelled all cyber operations (offensive and defensive) against Russia, and fired a bunch of the Cyber team too. Oh and he took whatever classified documents he had back to Mar-A-Largo as well.

And we still aren't openly saying he's a Russian asset yet?

#Trump #Russia #Spy #AgentOrange #TrumpIsARussianAsset #USA #Politics #Ukraine #CyberSecurity

I've seen AppArmor used primarily to *harden* the security of an existing program. Is it also reasonable to use it to *sandbox* known-malicious code? Or are other methods required?

Incredible statement from the American Meteorological Organization. It takes a lot for a scientific organization to issue a statement like this:

"U.S. leadership in scientific innovation is at risk due to the recent and ongoing reductions in U.S. federal science capabilities. The consequences to the American people will be large and wide-ranging, including increased vulnerability to hazardous weather...Recent terminations within the government workforce for science are likely to cause irreparable harm and have far-reaching consequences for public safety, economic well-being, and the United States’ global leadership."

Full statement here: ametsoc.org/ams/about-ams/ams-

Over my career I've been involved in hundreds of contract negotiations, many of them including stuff like software licensing. I've done this work for governments, and corporations, for myself, and for non-profits.

Which is to say, I know what words mean. I know what the legal norms are in multiple jurisdictions, and I know when someone is trying to bullshit me.

I have no doubt that Mozilla think they need this license and privacy policy. I'm concerened enough by the "why" to ditch firefox.

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Mozilla have published an update to this:
> "UPDATE: We’ve seen a little confusion about the language regarding licenses, so we want to clear that up. We need a license to allow us to make some of the basic functionality of Firefox possible. Without it, we couldn’t use information typed into Firefox, for example. It does NOT give us ownership of your data or a right to use it for anything other than what is described in the Privacy Notice."

I want to break this down.

mastodon.social/@sarahjamielew

The sound you're about to hear is the economy seizing up, grinding people and companies into the ground as Trump-mandated uncertainty about...well, everything becomes the central reality.

We'll be lucky if it's only a bad recession.

reuters.com/markets/europe/atl

We live in what Karl Polanyi called a "market society," in which commercial market exchanges have almost completely supplanted non-market exchange. Gone are the great pillars of pre-capitalist economies: domestic household production, reciprocity, and redistribution. In their place are buying and selling. To access virtually any resource, including basic sustenance, we must first sell (usually ourselves).

1/15

"Donald Trump’s plan to impose #tariffs on #Canada, #Mexico and #China could force American consumers to pay an average of $1,200 more per year, a prominent economic thinktank warns." - theguardian.com/us-news/live/2 pity trump voters didn't understand that...

#Mozilla rewrites #Firefox’s Terms of Use after user backlash - techcrunch.com/2025/03/03/mozi good, but maybe this should have been caught before it was published... #privacy

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