Simo Häyhä has entered the chat.
Cyber security specialist.
Perpetual blue team botherer and a glorified network janitor.
Specialty coffee addict.
Slow regard of silent things.
Trying to leave it better than I found it.
Mastodon: @0xtero
Simo Häyhä has entered the chat.
Local mail client (Thunderbid) -> IMAP/POP -> sync.
Once done, move to a local folder and delete from Gmail.
You can just backup the Thunderbird profile, if you want to keep the mails safe
He can touch deeznuts
Serving my car with 3rd party parts is stealing?
Yeah, and as the article links, this is just not about media, CDs, DVDs and games. It’s also about very physical products that we immediately associate as “owned” - like printers, phones, cars, tractors or even, (lol) trains. They’re all locked to manufacturers parts and repair services and increasingly difficult to circumvent.
Get a physical copy that doesn’t require internet activation then, assholes.
I think the point was, it is increasingly hard to find such products.
And even once you think you’ve bought such product, DRM makes sure it’s still not really yours.
But at least MKBHD tried to say nice things about it in his video. He really tried.
Yes, because the last two years have been so full of fantastically good news.
Antenna Pod is 10/10.
What’s really wild is that you don’t have to go that far into the past (just ca. 20 years) when the Internet was all about Information wanting to be Free. It was hopeful time of people coming together around new technology. There were a lot new businesses with wild innovations.
And then, just in a decade it was all gone. Replaced by unregulated behemoths that merged until there’s a dirty dozen left, controlling most of global money and information.
Enshittification of the Internet.
The real problem with the internet isn’t Facebook or Twitter or Reddit, it’s the fact the entire experience is pretty much controlled by Microsoft and Google
I think the real problem is that the entire Internet is basically just a dozen multi-billion Big Tech companies and the entire “Internet economy” is so tightly weaved into advertising money.
Mastodon has user defined word filters, you can completely mute this crap (of course people love misspelling his name).
I wish lemmy/kbin would get something similar it’s really annoying to have this fucker in my feed daily.
20% seems really low, but I guess it’s better than 0%
I’d be interested in actually being able to order a Framework laptop.
Still salty they don’t have anything in Scandinavia (yes, I know. I’ll wait).
Oh, my bad. I think read it bit too fast. Or it just blew my mind and I mixed things up.
Ok, so this thing is just 790m across and has something that’s 220m across orbiting it 435km away?
That thing must be denser than average Trump voter.
Can someone with orbital-mechanics-math-foo care to explain how this works? I’m completely out of my depth.
I wish international law regarding war crimes was actually enforceable. There’s a long list of world leaders who’ve gotten away with mass murder with no consequences.
In words of Dan Geer from his 2014 Black Hat keynote:
Today the relevant legal concept is “product liability” and the
fundamental formula is “If you make money selling something, then
you better do it well, or you will be held responsible for the
trouble it causes.” For better or poorer, the only two products
not covered by product liability today are religion and software,
and software should not escape for much longer.
The EU legislation has good intentions. Software should not escape product liability. However, the current proposal is somewhat flawed (unless EU actually intends to finance security testing for FOSS projects!) and it needs some language to protect open-source innovation and distributed development models.
I’m hoping the EU will allow a model where FOSS developers can receive donations/charge for support without having to risk huge penalties.
fair enough
It’s wild that a site with hundreds of millions of users, didn’t invest into multiple-account deletion tools.
True start-up mentality, that one.
Just shows how our “critical” social media is really just some hasty tape and bubblegum behind the scenes to keep the front from falling apart.