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"Problematic opinions" is a charge people in power level against dissenters. Colonizers think indigenous people have "problematic opinions". The fossil fuel industry thinks climate change and peak oil activists have "problematic opinions". White supremacists think MLK and Malcolm X had "problematic opinions". Parliamentarians thought the Suffragettes had "problematic opinions". The corporate tech industry thinks the software freedom movement have "problematic opinions".

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Procrastination is a real problem we need to talk about... later.

I don't really care if I loose followers over this, I'm very tired of being quiet about it.

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As someone who is on the autism spectrum, the symptoms are obvious. RMS clearly is autistic, and fails at social interaction, as do I. I don't think that justifies the very blatant quote mining Vice did. Stallman has always been a very progressive person, if you ever paid attention to his website he would constantly call for people to campaign for women's rights, queer rights, etc. He's never treated anyone unfairly based on who they are. I've talked to him before, he's a genuinely nice person.

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"The thing is, I think Richard is probably high-functioning autistic... like me. He says stupid things sometimes, without taking into account how other people will feel (because he can't. which is OK. I don't understand other peoples emotions either)."

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"The sad thing is that RMS is one of the champions of womens rights in
the free software world. He has said some stupid things in the past,
but he's a really nice guy and really supportive. He's always there to
answer emails and offer guidance on things. He is one of my role models."

"He accepted my project (Libreboot) into the GNU project, after I came
out as transgender for instance. It didn't phase him at all."

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Today, the @fsfe@twitter.com's and @OpenForumEurope@twitter.com's Policy Meeting connects #FreeSoftware communities with EU policy makers. Exciting discussions about how we can strengthen software freedom, digital sovereignty, and a better collaboration in Europe together

I get to write an essay on The Hacker Manifesto for English class. Uni is great.

It is rather upsetting when people trash JS devs just because of the abuse by some web developers. Please don't do that, JS is not an inherently bad language. It being shoehorned into every website, often by the demand of companies, is the issue.

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What I'm saying is: Please don't make an entire website that just needs to be text in React because it looks prettier. I understand if you're building something that requires user interaction, but if I'm going on the website of a local business and it won't display without JS... It's rather frustrating.

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I would be much more comfortable with some of alternate standard, a standard for webapps where folks could download them similarly to how "Chromium Apps" used to work. But the idea of having the web filled with JS instead of the originally intended hypertext makes me a bit... sad. Espeically because I never really lived to see the web in it's purest form. I started using the internet in the Flash era.

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While I have respect for any programmer, regardless of language, the sheer amount of web developers who cram needless JS in their website makes me sad. That's not to say that JS itself is an inherently bad language, but perhaps introducing it as a web standard was a mistake.

Concept: Famicom Mastodon client using the Famicom Modem and the Family BASIC keyboard.

I finished up the #Gopher server I started writing yesterday.

github.com/yam655/gofor

Now you can "go for" my #GopherHole to see it in action

gopher://yam655.com/

I could probably make it better by rewriting it. At 151 lines, I might at some point.

Also: The source is 5.7K while the README.md file accompanying it is is 9.0K.

"Source available" licenses are more nonfree / dangerous than straight up traditional proprietary no-source-available software/licenses. I am actively afraid of being exposed to code under such a license: that's now information that is difficult for me to use in my work on FOSS.

On the normalization of surveillance.

Just watched a commercial for xfinity wifi in which there's the classic scene, teenage boy climbs through window to visit girlfriend after curfew, but then, wham, dad pops in. Busted. Dad holds up his phone, showing a notification. "Kid's phone has connected to wifi."

This is of course being sold as security feature, but it's kinda creepy, no? Every time you go near someone's house, they get an alert? And there's the angle that we carry tracking devices with us at all times, with the expectation (if not the reality) perhaps that only authorized people will review our records, but our devices are also quite promiscuous about attaching to wifi networks and revealing our movements. And clearly there's a market for watchers, based on the fact there's a whole ad targeting them.

"By cross-referencing just one hour of video footage from public webcams with Instagram stories taken and shared in Times Square, BuzzFeed News was able to confirm the real names and identities of a half dozen people."
buzzfeednews.com/article/megha
.onion: bfnews3u2ox4m4ty.onion/article

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