Sad news: Kaisen Linux distro is shutting down
Another specialized Linux distro has announced its shutdown, joining the growing graveyard of discontinued distributions.
https://www.neowin.net/news/sad-news-another-linux-distro-is-shutting-down/
Intel's CEO survives baptism of fire, will his company do the same?
Lip-Bu Tan has received Trump's approval. Still, Intel needs more than a PR boost: it may be slimming down too much to perform.
AMD's desktop PC market share hits a new high as server gains slow down — Intel now only outsells AMD 2:1, down from 9:1 a few years ago
And revenue shares continue to set records.
Netanyahu Says He’s “Very” Invested in Idea of “Greater Israel” to Conquer Large Swaths of Middle East
“Greater Israel” is an extremist ideology for Israel to conquer Palestine as well as parts of numerous other countries.
Archived version: archive.is/newest/truthout.org…
Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.
like this
New York sues Zelle: "Users Lost More Than $1 Billion While Zelle Operator Controlled by Major Banks Knew the Platform Was Vulnerable to Scammers"
Attorney General James Sues Company Behind Zelle for Enabling Widespread Fraud
NEW YORK – New York Attorney General Letitia James today sued Early Warning Services, LLC (EWS), a company owned and controlled by a group of the largest banksNew York State Attorney General
Stripe Says Support Team Reps Were 'Totally Wrong' About LGBTQ Content Ban
Stripe Says Support Team Reps Were 'Totally Wrong' About LGBTQ Content Ban - Aftermath
Stripe has told Aftermath that support team reps were mistaken when they suggested to callers that LGBTQ+ content, adult or not, was banned.aftermath.site
adhocfungus likes this.
(USA) Why you shouldn't get a Real ID
Please read Section 201(3)-(4) of the Real ID Act:
(3) OFFICIAL PURPOSE- The term 'official purpose' includes but is not limited to accessing Federal facilities, boarding federally regulated commercial aircraft, entering nuclear power plants, and any other purposes that the Secretary shall determine.
(4) SECRETARY- The term 'Secretary' means the Secretary of Homeland Security.
Source: dhs.gov/xlibrary/assets/real-i…
In other words, the Secretary of Homeland Security has unilateral authority to expand the uses of real IDs. In their 2008 rule, DHS even doubled down:
"DHS does not agree that it must seek the approval of Congress as a prerequisite to changing the definition in the future (except of course to remove one of the three statutorily-mandated official purposes) as § 201(3) of the Act gives discretion to the Secretary of Homeland Security to determine other purposes."
Source: federalregister.gov/documents/…
That could include voting, accessing medical care, etc. Do you trust Kristi Noem with this power? Do you trust every future secretary with this power?
If not, I urge you to not get a real id or real id driver's license if you don't have one, or turn in your real id for a state id or state driver's license if you do have one, and instead get a passport. The DHS cannot enforce anything if the majority of Americans refuse to get real ids. Let us not just bow down to a national id that invades our privacy and could be used to control us.
LinkedIn Joins Meta and YouTube in Abandoning Policies Designed to Counter Anti-Trans Hate
LinkedIn removes hate speech protections for transgender individuals
On July 29, 2025, LinkedIn removed “misgendering or deadnaming” from examples of prohibited content in its policy on hateful and derogatory content.opentermsarchive.org
KDE Gear 25.08 released
Summertime edition has arrived! Look forward to new features Itinerary, Dolphin, NeoChat and more.
Whether you need to brush up on your languages to visit exotic lands, plan your trips, keep up to date while on the move, meet up with friends and colleagues, create content from your holiday clips, or just chill as your quaint steam engine trundles up a picturesque peak, KDE Gear 🌞 25.08 has got you covered.
KDE 🌞 Gear 25.08
Travel Itinerary Itinerary is your app for planning journeys and traveling. Itinerary works on your desktop and phone and can hold information on your accommodation, generate QRs for your boarding passes, inform you of delays and cancellations, find …KDE 🌞 Gear 25.08
like this
Exposing how automation apps can spy—and how to detect it
UW-Madison researchers expose how automation apps can spy—and how to detect it - College of Engineering - University of Wisconsin-Madison
A team of University of Wisconsin-Madison engineers and computer scientists has identified vulnerabilities in popular automation apps that can make it easy for an abuser to stalk individuals, track their cellphone activity, or even control...College of Engineering - University of Wisconsin-Madison
How to Train Your Own ChatGPT: A Step-by-Step Resource Guide to Custom GPTs
How to Train Your Own ChatGPT: A Step-by-Step Resource Guide to Custom GPTs
If you have ever wished ChatGPT could just understand your style without you repeating yourself every time, a Custom GPT is exactly what you need.OpenGrowth (OpenGrowth Weekly Newsletter)
Foreign interference can be hidden in plain sight. Here’s how countries use ‘sharp power’ in Australia.
Op-ed by Ihsan Yilmaz, Research Professor of Political Science and International Relations, Deakin University - Ana-Maria Bliuc, Associate Professor in Social Psychology, University of Dundee - John Betts, Senior Lecturer, Monash University - Nicholas Morieson, Research fellow, Deakin University.
Last week, Australian authorities arrested a woman for foreign interference. The Chinese citizen and Canberra resident is just the third person ever charged under our foreign interference laws.
According to the Australian Federal Police, she was allegedly gathering information on, and may be involved in efforts to infiltrate, the Guan Yin Citta Buddhist association. The group is banned in China.
[...]
The story might seem unimportant. After all, it doesn’t involve defence secrets or political leaders, but a small, relatively obscure community.
But this is exactly why it matters. The case shows the Chinese Communist Party is deeply interested in Australia’s Chinese diaspora communities. It’s willing to disregard Australian law to police and manipulate them in ways that serve Beijing’s interests.
It also shows how authoritarian regimes use “sharp power”, or covert, manipulative influence, to do more than just spy. They also surveil, intimidate and control communities far beyond their borders.
[...]
Sharp power is different [from soft power and hard power in that] it manipulates and distorts the information people receive, quietly shaping how they see the world and the choices they think they have. It’s the use of covert, manipulative and often emotional tactics to shape how other countries think, decide and act, often without them realising it’s happening.
[...]
When China’s state news agency, Xinhua, operates openly in other countries, it is playing the soft power game. But when China Radio International secretly funds 33 radio stations in 14 countries, or when Turkey spreads anti-Western conspiracy theories and disinformation, it crosses into sharp power.
[...]
Sharp power in Australia
The Canberra spy case shows how Beijing can shape opinions by infiltrating local Chinese organisations. It can also control information and mobilise people in ways that serve its own political interests. It reveals how some authoritarian governments regard co-ethnic, co-religious, or culturally linked diasporas in the West as part of their national community and seek to influence them accordingly.
Australia’s universities have also been targets of China’s sharp power. Scholars critical of Beijing’s oppression of Tibetans, Uighur Muslims, and pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong have faced pressure from student groups aligned with Chinese state interests.
The Chinese language media in Australia has also become deeply influenced by Beijing’s narratives. Many once independent outlets now republish state controlled content, narrowing the diversity of views available to Chinese-speaking Australians. This also encourages them to remain loyal and connected to China.
[...]
For a multicultural society such as Australia, the challenge is to respond firmly to authoritarian sharp power attacks without undermining the openness and diversity that are among our greatest democratic strengths.
[...]
Foreign interference can be hidden in plain sight. Here’s how countries use ‘sharp power’ in Australia
Authoritarian nations are using new tactics, from emotional manipulation to digital surveillance, to sway diaspora attitudes in their favour.The Conversation
Pro-Ukraine ISW confirms 110km² losses in 24 hours
I plan to ignore the meeting with Trump, assuming he is going to keep demanding impossible concession.
Not a fan of these Xitter idiots but this was the source xcancel.com/GeromanAT/status/1…
like this
We caught companies making it harder to delete your personal data online
We caught companies making it harder to delete your personal data online – The Markup
Dozens of companies are hiding how you can delete your personal data, The Markup and CalMatters found.themarkup.org
like this
like this
like this
My understanding is that they used the existing laws as a framework and then went a little above and beyond them. There is an org in the US that's is trying to get these sorts of laws passed in every state and they want to make sure they are all compatible with each other.
I think one of the big differences is that MN residents can request what data a business has and the have corrections made.
So no, the grass isn't all that greener on the other side.
Chinese firm to be banned for stealing Samsung's OLED tech
Samsung fires another legal torpedo against its main Chinese rival
BOE is one of China's biggest display manufacturers and it's also fast becoming a serious competitor to Samsung Display globally. Even Apple has been buying OLED panels from BOE, most recently for its new iPhone SE.Asif Iqbal Shaik (SamMobile)
adhocfungus likes this.
SemanticWebBrowser - A browser for the semantic web with a controlled natural language as the primary interface
(which is not possible when starting from a ChatGPT-like app); and to capture this new paradigm in a new type of browser that has natural language as its primary interface, here called a semantic web-first browser.
Il colosso d'acciaio rimorchiato nell'Atlantico per mantenere operative le navi di Sua Maestà - Il blog di Jacopo Ranieri
Il colosso d'acciaio rimorchiato nell'Atlantico per mantenere operative le navi di Sua Maestà - Il blog di Jacopo Ranieri
Un migliaio di chilometri d’Oceano dal continente più vicino ed appena 53 totali d’estensione: in un luogo dove si è tentato di sfruttare fino all’ultimo angolo di terra emersa, per non parlare dei preziosi punti d’approdo, può sembrare strano che un…Jacopo (Il blog di Jacopo Ranieri)
Ideas coming down the track
Ideas coming down the track
Transport: New train technologies are less visible and spread less quickly than improvements to cars or planes. But there is still plenty of innovation going on, and ideas are steadily making their way out onto the railsThe Economist
Rozaŭtuno likes this.
GitHub - todotxt/todo.txt: ‼️ A complete primer on the whys and hows of todo.txt.
‼️ A complete primer on the whys and hows of todo.txt. - todotxt/todo.txtGitHub
LOL GitHub [2018]
jwz: LOL Github
So MICROS~1 bought Github and everybody's freaking out right now trying to re-host their projects on someone else's service. THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU STORE YOUR DATA IN THE CLOWN.www.jwz.org
adhocfungus likes this.
Samsung → iPhone: Need Your De-Google Tips
cross-posted from: sopuli.xyz/post/31024070
Making the jump from Samsung to iPhone soon, mainly for privacy reasons.
Want to cut Google out as much as possible while I'm at it.What I'm planning so far:
- Mailbox.org instead of Gmail
- DuckDuckGo for search, would prefer something even better
- Safari with all the privacy stuff turned on
Where I'm stuck:
- What about YouTube? Just use the web version?
- Google Drive alternatives that actually work well?
- Best way to store photos that aren't big greedy corps?
Questions:
- Any must-have privacy apps once I get the iPhone?
- Settings I should change immediately out of the box?
- Services I'm forgetting that are probably feeding Google my data?
UK police treated to 10 new LFR vans in fresh expansion
A fresh expansion of UK crimefighters' access to live facial recognition (LFR) technology is being described by officials as "an excellent opportunity for policing." Privacy campaigners disagree.
The Home Office said today that more police forces across England will gain LFR capabilities thanks to ten new "cutting edge" vans being wheeled out, adding to those already in use by London's Metropolitan Police and forces in South Wales.
Seven forces will gain access to LFR vans as part of the latest expansion. These are: Greater Manchester, West Yorkshire, Bedfordshire, Surrey and Sussex (jointly), and Thames Valley and Hampshire (jointly).
UK expands police facial recognition rollout with 10 new vans heading to a town near you
: Seven additional regions across England will now have access to the controversial techConnor Jones (The Register)
New De-Google and De-Amazon challenges
Thanks to everyone who participated in the first 5-Week De-Google Challenge on Signal!
I'm about to start another de-Google challenge AND a de-Amazon challenge on Monday.
Here is info on the de-Amazon group. (Signal group and PDF plan)
The de-Google Signal group is here.
And for the de-Google challenge we'll be using this checklist
I hope you'll join (and share) one...or both!.
like this
New De-Google and De-Amazon challenges
Thanks to everyone who participated in the first 5-Week De-Google Challenge on Signal!
I'm about to start another de-Google challenge AND a de-Amazon challenge on Monday.
Here is info on the de-Amazon group. (Signal group and PDF plan)
The de-Google Signal group is here.
And for the de-Google challenge we'll be using this checklist
I hope you'll join (and share) one...or both!.
New De-Google and De-Amazon challenges
Thanks to everyone who participated in the first 5-Week De-Google Challenge on Signal!
I'm about to start another de-Google challenge AND a de-Amazon challenge on Monday.
Here is info on the de-Amazon group. (Signal group and PDF plan)
The de-Google Signal group is here.
And for the de-Google challenge we'll be using [this checklist](punchinguppress.com/post/shake…
I hope you'll join (and share) one...or both!).
Russia clamps down on WhatsApp and Telegram over data sharing
Russia clamps down on WhatsApp and Telegram over data sharing
Calls via foreign-owned platforms curbed as critics say Kremlin is pushing for greater control over Russia’s internetGuardian staff reporter (The Guardian)
adhocfungus likes this.
presente pignanza con aggiornamenti stellari ci porta al futuro sempre più conifero (aggiornamenti Pignio)
Nonostante il corrente clima della mia terra ormai sia talmente tanto seccante da portare quasi difficoltà a respirare, figurarsi esistere (…nonostante sia un clima umido, che assurdo paradosso), stranamente in questo agosto non sto scadendo troppo nel rotting… e, infatti, piano piano il Pignio (che, manco a farlo apposta, sotto sotto in questo periodo dell’anno […]
How to disable Firefox's battery-draining AI features
browser.ml.chat.enabled = false
browser.ml.chat.shortcuts = false
browser.ml.chat.shortcuts.custom = false
browser.ml.chat.sidebar = false
browser.ml.enable = false
browser.tabs.groups.smart.enabled = false
Karate or Tae Kwon Do for kids?
Which one do you think could fit better for her age and also considering she likes it which is better in the long term?
adhocfungus likes this.
Is it possible to run qbittorrent and protonvpn in a VM?
Does anyone know how to run qbittorrent and protonvpn in a VM? When I try to run the qbittorrent setup app I get this message (image below) and I don't see anything mentioning a VM in the qbittorrent [dot] org forum.
I am new to torrenting, so I don't really know what to do. I figured/assumed that torrenting/seeding in a VM might be safer as it is another layer deep, and that it may help keep traffic separate (inside the VM: I'd be using a vpn and torrenting, and outside the VM: I'd not be using a vpn and just regular internet surfing). Is this possible?
Thank you.
like this
Don't run your torrent client in a VM, that doesn't actually provide you with any additional security.
Use a Docker container instead. Binhex has torrent+vpn containers that will fetch the random open port number from Proton and pipe it into qBittorrent for you, as well as make sure the port is updated if the VPN drops. The container also acts as a killswitch.
Using a docker container provides you with the exact amount of extra protection as using a VM: zilch.
Only advantage is you can use other people's config easily.
- signed, someone happily using their own VM-based setup
WindAqueduct
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •Something to note:
In Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, Texas, and Wyoming, you can only get a Real ID. If you live in one of these states, please contact your state senator, representative, and governor to express your concerns and demand a state id.
Also, everyone should contact their members of congress and the president, and demand that the real id act be repealed.
RedWizard [he/him, comrade/them]
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •WindAqueduct
in reply to RedWizard [he/him, comrade/them] • • •The reason it's taken 20 years to implement (and actually, it still hasn't technically been implemented, since we're still in the initial enforcement stage) is because people cared and still do.
Vanth
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •That ship has sailed. Some states have been issuing them since 2012. Multiple political leaders from both sides opposed it: both Clintons, Ron Paul, Mike Huckabee, Obama. And advocacy groups on both sides opposed it: guns rights activist to immigrant rights activists to domestic violence aid groups. Too little, too late to swim against the post-9/11 security theater that George W Bush used to speedrun introducing so many bad things.
And the "what ifs" you presented are far from the worst they can do with it
unphazed
in reply to Vanth • • •WindAqueduct
in reply to unphazed • • •unphazed
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •30 something me was a goddamn idiot. 40 something me is a goddamn idiot but less so.
Thank you Caboose.
WindAqueduct
in reply to Vanth • • •"are far from the worst they can do"
I beg to differ. First, you should know there are plans to make real ids digital, possibly placed on your phone, and real-time and remotely accessible according to AAMVA testimony: docs.house.gov/meetings/HM/HM0…
Now suppose that real ids are digital and required for medical care. Now, what's gonna happen if you say something, or attend a protest etc., that the government or corporations don't like? Well, in real time you will be denied your real id and consequently be unable to receive medical care.
This won't happen today or even this decade. Right now they're laying the groundwork for implementing this in maybe 20 years. That's why we must fight back NOW.
eneff
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •This is entirely irrelevant to any member of this community that is not a US citizen.
I would appreciate if you could post things like this in a regional community to avoid generating useless noise for everyone else.
like this
Clear likes this.
xeroxguts
in reply to eneff • • •unphazed
in reply to xeroxguts • • •WindAqueduct
in reply to eneff • • •atrielienz
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •I have been waiting over a year to get a passport. They're so backed up that they literally just send you your documents back and ask you to reapply in a given amount of time. It's also more expensive to get a passport than it is to get a driver's license or "real ID" and you may not have the option to just not have one if you work somewhere that requires it (like an airport).
If your concern is that they might change the rules about being allowed to use Real ID for voting (or that having a Real ID would be a requirement for voting, excluding non-Real ID licenses or state ID's because the government could potentially invalidate the ID you do have, I'm going to point out that in this time where ICE is literally stealing people off the street regardless of their legal status in the country and deporting them, what you're suggesting doesn't make sense especially with the higher bar of entry for a passport, and the fact that some states do not any longer provide any other option besides passport or REAL ID.
like this
giantpaper likes this.
lemmyarcade
in reply to atrielienz • • •like this
themadcodger e giantpaper like this.
WindAqueduct
in reply to atrielienz • • •atrielienz
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •WindAqueduct
in reply to atrielienz • • •Ok, I did not tell people to not have a license at all. If you live in a state where you can only get a real id (Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, Texas, Wyoming), absolutely renew it. However, if you don't live in those states, you can turn in your real id for a state one, and I'm recommending that everyone do that.
As for "not being able to readily identify yourself", it is my opinion that no one should be required to carry their id and that if the police stop you, you should only provide what is legally required of you. Illinois for example is a no id state, and the police cannot just ask you to identify yourself (excluding traffic stops). However, I also recognize that there are dangers to asserting your rights against law enforcement. If you fear for your life, then of course there is no shame in complying with what is requested of you.
atrielienz
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •I don't think you're really addressing what I said. You took one thing out of it you didn't like to argue about and left the rest as if it didn't exist.
There is nothing stopping this establishment (regime, government, whatever you want to call it) from deciding that the Real ID is the only valid government ID and that state ID or Driver's License isn't a valid form of identification. You posit that the Real ID could in some way be invalidated or change the rules making it unstable for things like voting or identification in certain circumstances and that this is a reason to get a passport or a State ID.
This neglects states where it is illegal to have both a state ID and a driver's license, people who can't afford both, people who can't afford a passport etc.
Most state websites will mention somewhere that a state ID acts as a form of identification within the state. Meaning the federal government could absolutely not consider it a valid form of identification. Other states aren't even required to take your state ID as a valid form of identification.
You're also neglecting that plenty of states haven't enacted a mandatory Real ID program yet or it hasn't gone into affect yet, however that may happen in a year, two years etc and so not getting a Real ID upon renewal will end up costing them more money they don't necessarily have.
Your reasons for not getting a Real ID aren't even particularly clear and you didn't answer any clarifying questions.
What makes the Real ID more dangerous than a State ID or Passport?
How much more expensive is it to get a Passport than a Real ID?
Is the process to receive a Real ID in some way more of a risk to personal privacy?
If it is a risk, what are the risks to personal privacy while getting a State ID or Passport?
Is there a reason to believe that this regime or one in the future will preclude Real ID from being used to prove things like citizenship status or voting rights?
WindAqueduct
in reply to atrielienz • • •I did only say state id in my original post, because I personally don't have a driver's license, but I really meant any form of state identification. Sorry if that was unclear. I have edited the post. As for "people who can't afford a passport", well, there's also the option of getting a passport card for $65 ($30 for the card, $35 for the processing fee if getting a card for the first time. When renewing the card, you only pay $30) and the card lasts 10 years, so it's pretty inexpensive. But also a passport isn't terribly expensive when you consider the fact that it's valid for 10 years. Lastly, I wanna say that I am not neglecting people who can't afford passports; it's the federal government who's doing that by requiring a real id. Also, I said in another comment that if you absolutely need a real id right now, then you should keep it. Just consider getting rid of it as soon as you can.
I'm not sure what you mean. In another comment I listed the five states that only have real ids and said that the residents there should protest to their state legislators and governor. I never said that you shouldn't go without an id at all.
How are my reasons unclear? I explicitly said why in my post: the secretary of homeland security has unilateral authority to expand the official purposes of the real id. Can the secretary of state do that for passports? Can a state executive officer do that for a state id? Additionally, in another comment, I said that there are plans to make real ids digital and accessible remotely and in real-time according to AAMVA testimony: docs.house.gov/meetings/HM/HM0… This would allow the government to revoke your digital real id in real time if you say or do something the government doesn't like. A digital real id would also make it much easier for the government to track you. Passports, by contrast, are probably immune to digitalization for this century, as the US would have to convince 150+ nations to accept a digital passport. (I should have mentioned this in my original post, but I thought it would make my post too long.)
There is no reason to believe that, which is why we must fight back now, before 90%+ of Americans have a real id, making it easier to do what you said. We have proof that we actually can resist. Because of efforts from state legislatures and people around 2008-2010, the DHS's real id rule from that time was largely ignored. The ACLU even declared in 2012 that the real id was "dead" (source: aclu.org/press-releases/real-i…). That's proof that we can resist this.
[By the way, if you're curious about the reasons why Real ID was able to survive past 2012, it's because 1) around 2016, the federal government started saying that you would need a real id to fly, while acknowledging in a small footnote that there are 15 other acceptable ids that the TSA accepts, including passports. So people started pressuring their state legislators to comply. 2) The Real ID office at the DHS colluded directly with state DMV chiefs to prepare for real id implementation: "Nevertheless, it is telling that despite what was happening at the higher level, DMV chiefs were largely cooperative with the REAL ID Office. One interviewee said that although some governors prohibited their states from becoming compliant with REAL ID, those states still implemented perhaps 95 percent of the Act’s requirements. State DMVs would use the language of being 'consistent' with the Act’s requirements, rather than 'compliant,' thereby avoiding embarrassing their governors, while at the same time making the licenses more secure" (source: Magdalena Krajewska's 2020 journal article, “Implementing the REAL ID Act:
Intergovernmental Conflict and Cooperation in Homeland Security Policy”, doi.org/10.1093/publius/pjaa01…).]
One risk is that it makes it easier to create a national id database. Now, the real id act doesn't explicitly create a national database. However, what the federal government did do is it offered federal funding to each state to cover the costs of implementing real id, but "to be eligible to receive such grants, states shall provide electronic access to their databases to all other states" (source: same journal article as above). Meaning that if Texas and New York both accepted federal funding and the federal government wanted access to New York's database, it could just ask Texas.
Real ID is Dead. New Mexico IDs Will Continue to be Valid.
American Civil Liberties Unionushmel
in reply to atrielienz • • •Eager Eagle
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •like this
giantpaper likes this.
Nyadia (she/they)
in reply to Eager Eagle • • •Nah it makes sense, if you don't drive a car you're not a real US citizen
/s
like this
giantpaper likes this.
Eager Eagle
in reply to Nyadia (she/they) • • •like this
giantpaper likes this.
grey_maniac
in reply to Eager Eagle • • •WindAqueduct
in reply to Eager Eagle • • •atrielienz
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •like this
giantpaper likes this.
upstroke4448
in reply to atrielienz • • •You can have a drivers license and a state Id. You just can't have 2 real id compliant cards.
There a few states that don't allow you to have multiple state issued credentials (Indiana, Illinois).
Usually you are not allowed to have multiple IDs from multiple states.
Given those limitations I'm not sure I see value in having both.
In my state you really don't have a choice. They do not issue regular IDs anymore.
like this
giantpaper likes this.
swelter_spark
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •like this
giantpaper likes this.
WindAqueduct
in reply to swelter_spark • • •swelter_spark
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •I don't live in one of those states, so I'm not sure why it was done the way it was.
I started the DL application online and took the requested docs to an office to finalize it without seeing any option to select the type of license I wanted.
The woman who processed it actually told me I didn't bring the right documents, but that it didn't matter because I could just sign an affidavit stating that I really, actually do live here.
bloubz
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •What country are you even talking about? How on Earth can you burst in and shout a mysterious country's laws without context?
We're not your flatmates
like this
giantpaper likes this.
irotsoma
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •like this
giantpaper likes this.
WindAqueduct
in reply to irotsoma • • •BussyCat
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •WindAqueduct
in reply to BussyCat • • •BussyCat
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •Mugita Sokio
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •WindAqueduct
in reply to Mugita Sokio • • •There are indeed plans to create a digital id that can be updated in real time according to AAMVA testimony: docs.house.gov/meetings/HM/HM0…
Suppose the Secretary of Homeland Security says you need a real id to vote or receive medical care. And suppose we now have digital real ids. What's gonna happen to you if you do something the government or corporations don't like? Well, your real id will be revoked in real time and you won't be able to access medical care.
We must stand up to this now. Passports will generally be safe this century from digitalization because the US would need to convince 150+ countries to accept a digital passport.
Mugita Sokio
in reply to WindAqueduct • • •