As governments around the world are set to make the Internet more restrictive and privacy-invading, we need a solution
I'm sure I'd be preaching to the choir if I told you that it's time for us to immigrate from übercorp owned social media and services. All of you have done so, so that's not the point of this post. Even though we are on these new platforms, the fediverse is still sensitive to requests from governmental bodies and organizations. Lemmy.zip has already blocked UK users and Lemmy.world will almost certainly do the same. Due to the size of Matrix's biggest homeserver matrix.org, the admins of said homeserver are beginning to follow the OSA and have already raised their minimum age to 18+. And instances who don't follow the Act could be subjected to insurmountable paperwork and even blocked from the UK, Australia and other countries enacting these outrageous laws soon.
Blocking UK users to avoid this is almost a necessity, and as Labour is attempting to get lawmakers to outlaw VPNs, we could be seeing the equivalent of the UK Great Firewall soon. However, it will take significant amounts of time, money and paperwork to outlaw VPNs and to get ISPs to block sites and protocols. This is where federated and open source platforms have an advantage, without being shackled by bureaucracy they are able to quickly adapt. But this is not sustainable, and eventually the UK will become even more overreaching in order to gain more control over people's Internet usage.
Darknets such as Tor, I2P and Yggdrasil are a potential solution, however they have multiple issues. Tor is slow and has a reputation of being used by pedophiles and drug traffickers. I2P is scattered in implementation and cannot handle high load. ~~Yggdrasil is alpha software and requires IPv6, which in many countries is simply not possible to use~~. Whilst these darknets are extremely resistant to censorship from other countries, with the only way to fully dismantle them would be to shutoff all access to the Internet, they still are not capable of handling modern Internet usage.
We might need new completely independent mediums seperate from the Internet to avoid this. Physical bluetooth mesh networks or other technology is an example. Maybe even a new version of dial-up. All I know is that governments will not stop here. I might seem like I'm overreacting here, but we need to be prepared for what is coming.
CORRECTION: I was told by a peer that Yggdrasil peers must have IPv6, however one does not need an IPv6 enabled network to use it, they just need an IPv6 operating system/device, which virtually every modern operating system including Windows and Linux does. Yggdrasil is actually Beta software.
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Cuba's huge leap forward in trans rights– citizens can now legally choose gender
Cuba’s huge leap forward in trans rights – citizens can now legally choose gender without surgery
Cuba has taken a significant step forward in trans rights by approving a law that allows individuals to self-declare their gender without requiring surgery.Chantelle Billson (PinkNews | Latest lesbian, gay, bi and trans news | LGBTQ+ news)
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Yeah, they've also seemed to follow Fidel's model of willingness to reflect and grow. Early Cuba was brutal, before and after their revolution. Fidel did and ordered horrible things, but he changed and showed remorse as he aged. That trait made him stick out to me among world leaders as someone who genuinely wanted what was best for his people and country. He also seemed to try to not rob the country blind as so many in positions like his do.
I wish nothing but the best for my neighbors in Cuba. I know they're going through more rough times, but they're tough as all get out and I suspect that they're far more likely to eventually move to a stateless, moneyless, and free society than any other nominally communist nation at the moment. And to my trans siblings in Cuba, congrats
The true one:
Here's a command line interface with vim open. Close it to disable the trap.
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I love it when wild animals yell at me.
Whether it's that guy at the bus stop who blocks the traffic or the one with the bible and the speaker that renders his words into nonsense noise...
They're all a part of our ecosystem!
Israeli rights groups accuse Israel of genocide in Gaza
Israeli rights groups accuse Israel of genocide in Gaza
Israel's government rejects the allegations in the separate reports by B'Tselem and Physicians for Human Rights-Israel.Emir Nader (BBC News)
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Thousands in Greece and Turkey evacuate as winds and heat fan wildfires
Thousands in Greece and Turkey evacuate as winds and heat fan wildfires
Czech firefighters and Italian aircraft join rescue effort in Greece, and firefighter among those killed in TurkeyHelena Smith (The Guardian)
Brazil to double down on Brics in defiance of Donald Trump
Celso Amorim, lead foreign affairs adviser to leftwing President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, told the Financial Times those attacks “are reinforcing our relations with the Brics, because we want to have diversified relations and not depend on any one country”.
I believe in the BRICS proposal. For any of you who don't, if you lived in a third world country you would understand what the missed potential is all about. Latin America is somewhat integrated, but people from Brazil could do scientific exchange with Uzbekistan, or an Algerian could be a professor in Senegal. The human potential is so great, because there are a lot of people who are left out from the current state of things.
Everyone wants to go study or be a professional in Europe, but what about all the other countries? Doing the hard thing (working together to reach new heights) is difficult, but it is the only way forward. And that's what the BRICS propose.
Lula says the US has ignored Brazil’s attempts to negotiate Trump's announced tariff
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said Thursday that his government has not been successful in trying to negotiate the 50% tariff on Brazilian imports that Donald Trump has threatened to impose.
Washington has ignored Brazil’s attempts to negotiate ahead of the measure’s expected implementation on Aug. 1., the Brazilian leader said.
https://apnews.com/article/lula-brazil-trump-tariffs-bolsonaro-561abba98f3a66ef2bfc36c7cb2034a4
Our Genocide
- .
PDF:
- Full Report.
- Summary.
Since October 2023, Israel has shifted its policy toward the Palestinians. Its military onslaught on Gaza, underway for more than 21 months, has included mass killing, both directly and through creating unlivable conditions, serious bodily or mental harm to an entire population, decimation of basic infrastructure throughout the Strip, and forcible displacement on a huge scale, with ethnic cleansing added to the list of official war objectives.This is compounded by mass arrests and abuse of Palestinians in Israeli prisons, which have effectively become torture camps, and tearing apart the social fabric of Gaza, including the destruction of Palestinian educational and cultural institutions. The campaign is also an assault on Palestinian identity itself, through the deliberate destruction of refugee camps and attempts to undermine the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA).
An examination of Israel’s policy in the Gaza Strip and its horrific outcomes, together with statements by senior Israeli politicians and military commanders about the goals of the attack, leads to the unequivocal conclusion that Israel is taking coordinated, deliberate action to destroy Palestinian society in the Gaza Strip. In other words: Israel is committing genocide against the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.
The term genocide refers to a socio-historical and political phenomenon involving acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group. Both morally and legally, genocide cannot be justified under any circumstance, including as an act of self-defense.
Genocide always occurs within a context: there are conditions that enable it, triggering events, and a guiding ideology. The current onslaught on the Palestinian people, including in the Gaza Strip, must be understood in the context of more than seventy years in which Israel has imposed a violent and discriminatory regime on the Palestinians, taking its most extreme form against those living in the Gaza Strip. Since the State of Israel was established, the apartheid and occupation regime has institutionalized and systematically employed mechanisms of violent control, demographic engineering, discrimination, and fragmentation of the Palestinian collective. These foundations laid by the regime are what made it possible to launch a genocidal attack on the Palestinians immediately after the Hamas-led attack on 7 October 2023.
The assault on Palestinians in Gaza cannot be separated from the escalating violence being inflicted, at varying levels and in different forms, on Palestinians living under Israeli rule in the West Bank and within Israel. The violence and destruction in these areas is intensifying over time, with no effective domestic or international mechanism acting to halt them. We warn of the clear and present danger that the genocide will not remain confined to the Gaza Strip, and that the actions and underlying mindset driving it may be extended to other areas as well.
The recognition that the Israeli regime is committing genocide in the Gaza Strip, and the deep concern that it may expand to other areas where Palestinians live under Israeli rule, demand urgent and unequivocal action from both Israeli society and the international community, and use of every means available under international law to stop Israel’s genocide against the Palestinian people.
OUR GENOCIDE
OUR GENOCIDE B’Tselem, July 2025 Since October 2023, Israel has fundamentally changed its policy toward the Palestinians. For more than 21 months,…Vimeo
The Fediverse is the Left Wing Circle Jerk
You could be forgiven for looking around Reddit and saying "this is the most Left wing place on the Internet".
But there is an even bigger Left wing bastion of insanity, Transgender orthodoxy, and unchecked out of control Moderation. And its called "the Fediverse"
Never in my life have I seen such a Hive containing the Damned and Reprobates of life.
A wise man once said "I may had voted for Obama.....but you people are insane".
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‘Revenge Is Not a Policy’: Israelis Voice Dissent Against the War in Gaza
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All it took for the West to so much as begin turning on Israel was pictures of skeletonised children.
If America and Europe truly believed in "Never again!" we would have carrier groups running 24-hour sorties and bombing Tel Aviv into the stone age. Any other country (outside of Africa, ugh) pulling this shit would have been flattened and invaded by now.
Nope! Instead we paid for this genocide. Solid return on AIPAC's investment!
I'm fucking sick. We're seeing images out of WWII concentration camps on the 2025 news. Cut Israel out from the world of decent men. They've forfeited their right to exist. Sorry guys, used to root for you. Never again!
I'm pretty sure Yemen is outside of Africa, yet America and Europe have not gone after Saudi Arabia and the UAE for their war crimes there.
What might be the connecting factor here?
Any other country (outside of Africa, ugh) pulling this shit would have been flattened and invaded by now.
Are you not aware of many wars around the world like Myanmar (and rohingya genocide) and Ukraine? What about yazidi? You're straight up delusional if you truly think any country with sizeable power would get flattened, especially nuclear-power.
Israel only has power because America gives it to them. They would collapse overnight if we went rolled into the Mediterranean looking for a fight.
Hell, if America pulled our support, their neighbors would flatten them, Sampson Doctrine be damned.
USA didn't give nukes to Israel and the neighbour thing you talk about was already tried in arab-israeli war.
foreignpolicy.com/2025/02/07/i…
Israel's Nuclear Weapons: How Israelis Deceived American Presidents From Eisenhower to JFK and Johnson
Newly declassified documents reveal how Israel operated under the noses of U.S. inspectors.Avner Cohen (Foreign Policy)
Trump says he cut ties with Jeffrey Epstein because 'he stole people who worked for me'
Trump says he cut ties with Jeffrey Epstein because 'he stole people who worked for me'
Trump's past friendship with Jeffrey Epstein has come under scrutiny after Attorney General Pam Bondi said she would not release files about Epstein.Dan Mangan (CNBC)
Raoul Duke likes this.
Trump Gives Russia Less Than Two Weeks to End Its War in Ukraine
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Ah, the infamous two weeks deadline. The same two weeks he would eradicate ISIS, fix American healthcare, create peace in the Middle East etc. etc.
Which means in two weeks he will never mention it again and act like he never said it.
Thailand and Cambodia Agree to Halt Fighting That Has Killed Dozens
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Tech bug keeps Mazda radios locked in to NPR
Tech bug keeps Mazda radios locked in to NPR
National Public Radio becomes essential listening for some drivers - because they are unable to retune.BBC News
Israel committing genocide in Gaza, say Israel-based human rights groups
Two leading human rights organisations based in Israel, B’Tselem and Physicians for Human Rights, say Israel is committing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza and the country’s western allies have a legal and moral duty to stop it.In reports published on Monday, the two groups said Israel had targeted civilians in Gaza only because of their identity as Palestinians over nearly two years of war, causing severe and in some cases irreparable damage to Palestinian society.
Multiple international and Palestinian groups have already described the war as genocidal, but reports from two of Israel-Palestine’s most respected human rights organisations, who have for decades documented systemic abuses, is likely to add to pressure for action.
Israel committing genocide in Gaza, say Israel-based human rights groups
Reports detailing intentional targeting of Palestinians as a group, and systemic destruction of Palestinian society, add to pressure for actionEmma Graham-Harrison (The Guardian)
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Two ~~leading human rights~~soon-to-be-terrorist organisations based in Israel
I guess this would be the important internal test for this society. Wether they'd snap out of it and face the crimes they committed and drastically change direction as a result. Or wherher they double down and increase domestic repression against dissenting voices who bring up those crimes. I bet on the latter since that's where many economic interests are vested and it would avoid instability at least for a while.
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French PM says EU-U.S. trade deal an act of ‘submission’ and a dark day for Europe
French PM says EU-U.S. trade deal an act of ‘submission’ and a dark day for Europe
France called a framework trade deal between the United States and European Union a “dark day” for Europe, saying the bloc had caved in to U.S.Reuters Staff (CTVNews)
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Thanks, good point, I think I just had a subconscious need to take a sideswipe at the reality that, had the US I was taught about in school not been a fabrication, we would not today be in the circumstances we are in.
I'm carrying a certain baseline level of rage pretty continuously since Jan 20, 2025, and it sometimes leaks out at inappropriate times.
Edit: No, since the morning of November 6th when I awoke to find myself having this reaction:
Recover a lost cryptocurrency
Email ;@raymondbucks079gmail
Telegram +1 575 9150630
Whatsapp ; +1 (703) 703–3825
I hope this helps you
Matttech497_Professional_Cybersecurity_Main_account
CEO of matttech497 Formerly CEO MvSQL and Eucalyptus & SVP@SUNTelegram
I love scam posts.
They just make me all warm and fuzzy inside!
And not because of the clearly scammy nature of it all, but mostly because it means that there are sufficient users of Lemmy to make it worthwhile to try and scam 🥰
So, thank you Matrecovery and RaymondBucks079, for letting us all know that the lemmy is infact well and truly alive.
Israel committing genocide in Gaza, say Israel-based human rights groups
Israel committing genocide in Gaza, say Israel-based human rights groups
Reports detailing intentional targeting of Palestinians as a group, and systemic destruction of Palestinian society, add to pressure for actionEmma Graham-Harrison (The Guardian)
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Viral 'honour' killing in southwest Pakistan triggers national outrage
KARACHI (Reuters) -A viral video of the "honour killing" of a woman and her lover in a remote part of Pakistan has ignited national outrage, prompting scrutiny of long-standing tribal codes and calls for justice in a country where such killings often pass in silence.
While hundreds of so-called honour killings are reported in Pakistan each year, often with little public or legal response, the video of a woman and man accused of adultery being taken to the desert by a group of men to be killed has struck a nerve.
The mother, Gul Jan Bibi, said the killings were carried out by family and local elders based on "centuries-old Baloch traditions", and not on the orders of the tribal chief.
"We did not commit any sin," she said in a video statement that also went viral. "Bano and Ehsan were killed according to our customs."
Israel committing genocide in Gaza, say Israel-based human rights groups
Israel committing genocide in Gaza, say Israel-based human rights groups
Reports detailing intentional targeting of Palestinians as a group, and systemic destruction of Palestinian society, add to pressure for actionEmma Graham-Harrison (The Guardian)
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Maybe they should also make it mandatory for pedestrians to carry rocket-propelled grenade launchers, and be trained in their operation.
This would hopefully make car drivers to exercise more caution.
/sarcasm that has an unfortunate chance of becoming reality in a few decades, you just watch
Cambodia and Thailand agree to ceasefire, says Anwar
Thailand and Cambodia have agreed to an immediate and unconditional ceasefire beginning at midnight, following a successful special meeting hosted and chaired by Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim.
Cambodia and Thailand agree to ceasefire, says Anwar
PUTRAJAYA: Thailand and Cambodia have agreed to an immediate and unconditional ceasefire beginning at midnight, following a successful special meeting hosted and chaired by Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim.The Star Online (The Star)
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More than 40 killed in DR Congo attack linked to Islamic State
ADF in DR Congo: IS-linked rebels accused of killing Christian worshippers in Komanda
Most of the dead were worshippers taking part in a night vigil which was stormed by armed men, officials said.Joseph Winter (BBC News)
BBC investigation uncovers lasting toxic legacy of cargo ship disaster off Sri Lanka
BBC uncovers lasting toxic legacy of cargo ship disaster off Sri Lanka
Scientists warn the damage to the environment after the 2021 X-Press Pearl disaster could be much more enduring.Leana Hosea & Saroj Pathirana (BBC News)
Nurdles are the raw materials that are melted to make plastic products and it is not unusual for large amounts to be transported in the global plastic supply chain.
Plastic should be banned for at 90% of its current usage.
Stop Big Oil from making billions from plastic.
Sewage spill causes deadly train derailment in Germany, police say
Sewage spill caused deadly train derailment in Germany, police say
The train driver, another rail employee and one passenger died, while 41 people were injured, prosecutors say.Emily Atkinson and Bethany Bell (BBC News)
Five killed in Bangkok market mass shooting
Thailand: Five killed in Bangkok market mass shooting
Police say officers are investigating the motive behind the incident in Thailand's capital.Jonathan Head (BBC News)
Head of Shaolin Temple in China under investigation on suspicion of embezzlement
Head of Shaolin Temple in China under investigation on suspicion of embezzlement
Controversy comes to the birthplace of kung-fu with accusations against head monk Shi YongxinGuardian staff reporter (The Guardian)
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Muscovites’ travel plans disrupted as Ukraine targets airspace with drones
Muscovites’ travel plans disrupted as Ukraine targets airspace with drones
Tens of thousands of passengers affected by systematic campaign aimed at bringing the war home to ordinary RussiansPjotr Sauer (The Guardian)
Moscow starts direct flights to North Korea amid decline in options for Russian tourists
Moscow starts direct flights to North Korea amid decline in options for Russian tourists
The Moscow-Pyongyang flights operated by Russia’s Nordwind Airlines will initially operate only once a monthGuardian staff reporter (The Guardian)
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US-EU trade deal is a ‘dark day’ for Europe, says French PM
Trump tariff of 15% means European exporters will face more than triple the average 4.8% levy now in force
The US-EU trade deal, clinched in a ballroom at Donald Trump’s golf resort in Scotland on Sunday, has been criticised by France’s prime minister and business leaders across Germany.
The deal, which will impose 15% tariffs on almost all European exports to the US including cars, ends the threat of a punitive 30% import duties being imposed on Trump’s 1 August deadline for a deal, but it is a world apart from the zero-zero import and export tariff the EU offered initially.
It also means European exporters to the US will face more then triple the average 4.8% tariff now in force, with negotiations to continue on steel, which is still facing a 50% tariff, aviation, and a question mark over future barriers to pharmaceutical exports.
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Thailand: Five killed in Bangkok market mass shooting
Five people were killed in a mass shooting at a food market in Bangkok on Monday.
The suspect in the attack at Or Tor Kor Market died after taking his own life, police in Thailand's capital confirmed.
Four of those killed were security guards and the fifth victim worked at the market. Two other market sellers were injured, police said.
Police Lieutenant Siam Boonsom told local media that the gunman was Thai and he had disputes with the market's security guards before.
Thailand: Five killed in Bangkok market mass shooting
Police say officers are investigating the motive behind the incident in Thailand's capital.Jonathan Head (BBC News)
The rise of Japan's far right was supercharged by Trump - and tourists
Japanese politics is a usually steady ship, verging on the boring most of the time.
Not anymore.
Last Sunday, a once obscure far-right party, Sanseito, surged from one to 15 seats in the elections, making them a serious contender in Japan's political scene.
With their "Japanese First" slogan, riffing off US President Donald Trump's "America First", they have truly ruffled the feathers of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and its embattled prime minister, Shigeru Ishiba.
How Japan's far right was supercharged by Trump and tourists
‘Sanseito says what others are thinking’: Why a once-obscure far-right party shook up Japan's political sceneShaimaa Khalil (BBC News)
Tourists always act like assholes according to the locals. The local customs aren’t always understood. I don’t think I’ve ever heard of a single place who says they love the behavior of tourists— except perhaps the people benefiting from those tourists.
The article mentions people jaywalking, which is annoying but seems pretty innocent. Trash, etc… the solution is clean the trash up… using all that tourist money. A solution could be to tax the tourists or the tourist industry. But I think we know that most governments are corrupt and only a fraction of that money will ever make it back, and even then it will probably be embezzled or misspent. I get it though, I used to live near a tourist area and they were so fucking annoying. But the only solution would be to get rid of tourist attractions, and some of those attractions are part of the local culture.
Tesla withheld data, lied, and misdirected police and plaintiffs to avoid blame in Autopilot crash
Tesla was caught withholding data, lying about it, and misdirecting authorities in the wrongful death case involving Autopilot that it lost this week.
The automaker was undeniably covering up for Autopilot.
Last week, a jury found Tesla partially liable for a wrongful death involving a crash on Autopilot. We now have access to the trial transcripts, which confirm that Tesla was extremely misleading in its attempt to place all the blame on the driver.
The company went as far as to actively withhold critical evidence that explained Autopilot’s performance around the crash. Within about three minutes of the crash, the Model S uploaded a “collision snapshot”—video, CAN‑bus streams, EDR data, etc.—to Tesla’s servers, the “Mothership”, and received an acknowledgement. The vehicle then deleted its local copy, resulting in Tesla being the only entity having access.
What ensued were years of battle to get Tesla to acknowledge that this collision snapshot exists and is relevant to the case.
The police repeatedly attempted to obtain the data from the collision snapshot, but Tesla led the authorities and the plaintiffs on a lengthy journey of deception and misdirection that spanned years.
Tesla withheld data, lied, and misdirected police and plaintiffs to avoid blame in Autopilot crash
Tesla was caught withholding data, lying about it, and misdirecting authorities in the wrongful death case involving Autopilot that it...Fred Lambert (Electrek)
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nocturne
in reply to sunglocto • • •like this
Maeve likes this.
SatansMaggotyCumFart
in reply to nocturne • • •Rivalarrival
in reply to SatansMaggotyCumFart • • •oce 🐆
in reply to nocturne • • •giacomo
in reply to nocturne • • •Carrot
in reply to nocturne • • •sp3ctr4l
in reply to Carrot • • •Yep, the answer to many of these problems is I2P.
TOR was invented by the US Navy, roughly 1/3 of major entry/exit nodes are estimated to be comprimised / run as honeypots by various LE / Intel agencies, and said LE and Intel agencies also know how to, and have deanonimyed various people and groups on TOR that they really wanted to go after.
TOR ain't it.
I2P is a lot closer to 'it'.
The other part of the answer is:
Well, now it turns out data hoarders were not just paranoid weirdos, they actually had foresight.
If you can host your own at least several terabyte mini/curated backup of the Internet Archive, and plug that into I2P, then congrats, you now are the backup plan for when, not if, they get massively purged of even more of their content than has already been taken out in the last ~2 years.
The old cyberpunk line holds true in another sense of meaning:
The future is already here, it just isn't evenly distributed.
SpikesOtherDog
in reply to sunglocto • • •🇦🇺𝕄𝕦𝕟𝕥𝕖𝕕𝕔𝕣𝕠𝕔𝕠𝕕𝕚𝕝𝕖
in reply to SpikesOtherDog • • •johntash
in reply to 🇦🇺𝕄𝕦𝕟𝕥𝕖𝕕𝕔𝕣𝕠𝕔𝕠𝕕𝕚𝕝𝕖 • • •🇦🇺𝕄𝕦𝕟𝕥𝕖𝕕𝕔𝕣𝕠𝕔𝕠𝕕𝕚𝕝𝕖
in reply to johntash • • •SpikesOtherDog
in reply to 🇦🇺𝕄𝕦𝕟𝕥𝕖𝕕𝕔𝕣𝕠𝕔𝕠𝕕𝕚𝕝𝕖 • • •🇦🇺𝕄𝕦𝕟𝕥𝕖𝕕𝕔𝕣𝕠𝕔𝕠𝕕𝕚𝕝𝕖
in reply to SpikesOtherDog • • •brachiosaurus
in reply to SpikesOtherDog • • •While not secure it could still provide a free and censorship-less alternative to the internet
Granbo's Holy Hotrod
in reply to sunglocto • • •WHARRGARBL
in reply to Granbo's Holy Hotrod • • •oce 🐆
in reply to Granbo's Holy Hotrod • • •NaibofTabr
in reply to Granbo's Holy Hotrod • • •like this
classic likes this.
josefo
in reply to NaibofTabr • • •NaibofTabr
in reply to josefo • • •planish
in reply to NaibofTabr • • •The Promised LAN
notes.pault.agNaibofTabr
in reply to planish • • •limer
in reply to sunglocto • • •This tech we all use is advancing exponentially.
And we must be ready to embrace the dizzying changes in the next few years so that we can improve our lives and have better governments.
BurgerBaron
in reply to sunglocto • • •Besides being slow I think the issues with darkweb can be overcome simply through general interest growing. Currently I personally have no real motivation to use such technologies beyond the decentralized fediverse on clearnet. But if things keep going the way they are, then I'll have motivation. I'm into digital media archiving so if that gets pushed further underground then I will have reason to bother.
I am paying attention of course, Canada is likely to copy cat EU/UK/AUS. Just as a general rule of thumb, but this stuff is in the works here too specifically.
Another thing to consider: handshake.org/
"Decentralized naming and certificate authority. An experimental peer-to-peer root naming system."
Handshake
handshake.orgNaibofTabr
in reply to sunglocto • • •meshtastic
Meshtastic
meshtastic.orgBlue_Morpho
in reply to NaibofTabr • • •Lora is typically 50k max (theoretical 256k). So less than dial up speed.
It is in no way a replacement technology for wifi.
NaibofTabr
in reply to Blue_Morpho • • •Obviously the solution is to have thousands of nodes per file transfer to increase the bandwidth.
This is a perfect plan which has absolutely no downsides.
Integrate777
in reply to NaibofTabr • • •Integrate777
in reply to NaibofTabr • • •Korne127
in reply to sunglocto • • •It sucks that literally using something that should be the default, truly protecting privacy, has such a bad reputation because… well it protects privacy.
waldfee
in reply to Korne127 • • •PhilipTheBucket
in reply to Korne127 • • •Seriously. The reason CSAM merchants and drug dealers use Tor is because it actually protects their privacy successfully. Whereas, if you're using a VPN or whatever cobbled-together solution, the feds just have a hearty laugh about it, send a subpoena by email or use some automated system that's even more streamlined, and then come and find you.
Tor is not bulletproof; they regularly run operations where they take down some big illegal thing on the dark web. But they have to do an operation for it, and if there were any solution that was any better, that thing would be even more infested with illegal material than "the dark web" is. That's just how it works. And listening to the newspapers when they tell you that it's a sign you need to stay away from those actually-effective solutions because "terrorism!" or whatever is a pretty foolish idea.
0x0
in reply to PhilipTheBucket • • •That tends to be more due to bad opsec than Tor itself, though.
PhilipTheBucket
in reply to 0x0 • • •Yeah. As far as I know, there are some theoretical state-actor attacks, but nothing that anyone's ever been able to make work in practice. Compromising something else is just always easier.
It was literally designed by professional spies to be resistant against state intelligence agencies. It was originally made by US intelligence for secret communication with their assets, and only released to the public when they realized they needed a bunch of additional traffic on the network that the US intelligence traffic can blend in with. At least as of the Snowden leaks (which showed NSA compromise of huge amounts of the internet including most HTTPS traffic), they hadn't figured out a way to undo it for their own spying purposes, either.
tatterdemalion
in reply to PhilipTheBucket • • •PhilipTheBucket
in reply to tatterdemalion • • •I've literally never in my life heard of "this person was doing (whatever), but they were behind a VPN, so we had to do (whatever elaborate sting operation) instead of compromising the VPN." I've heard that many times about Tor.
It's possible that no one's ever done something significant enough to make the feds interested from behind a VPN, just always used Tor, but I feel like it is unlikely. I feel like it's more likely that they either have the ability to force the VPN companies to comply with some legal structures that give them the info they need, or else just wiretap the pipes going in and out of the VPN servers and can sort things out pretty straightforwardly if they really start to care about it.
VPNs are certainly useful; they make it a lot more difficult for non-law-enforcement people to know what you're up to, which is a significant gain, and they are faster and generally more convenient than using Tor. But if you're actually concerned about the government, I would use Tor 100% of the time over a VPN.
Auth
in reply to PhilipTheBucket • • •PhilipTheBucket
in reply to Auth • • •Well, but we're talking about how to prepare for the future where it does need to be fed proof. At some point, I think pretty soon from now in some places, it's going to become necessary to either break the rules of the internet in ways that can actually get you in trouble, or accept that you have to do things like upload your ID to all these places, agree not to access certain types of content the government doesn't want you looking at, not say certain political things on social media or else you're going on a list, things like that.
I think option A is probably better and it probably makes sense to start to think about, how are we going to do that and not have the expanded-and-mission-creeped version of ICE showing up at your door for it to give you a citation or worse, a year from now.
Right now, yes, a VPN is fine. But that's only true for as long as the government doesn't strongly dislike anything that you are doing.
The Bard in Green
in reply to Korne127 • • •That reputation has entirely been created by the media frenzy over busting the worst kinds of criminals.
Oh they're all using the same technology? Yeah of course they are, because that's the technology that works the best. It has so many fucking use cases.
Funny that the media frenzy is hitting a fever pitch just as we most desperately need powerful tools for opposing fascism. Almost like that's not really a coincidence.
PastafARRian
in reply to Korne127 • • •Paper money is slow and has a reputation of being used by pedophiles and drug traffickers.
A lot of inert things are used in bad ways.
Onyxonblack
in reply to sunglocto • • •WoodScientist
in reply to sunglocto • • •Kilgore Trout
in reply to WoodScientist • • •WorldsDumbestMan
in reply to Kilgore Trout • • •Maybe we aren't meant to have things, we just had a lucky period, but the default state is total depravation.
The longer you hold onto things that aren't yours, the more you will suffer.
brachiosaurus
in reply to WoodScientist • • •Tech corporations own most popular and visited websites/services, they are not going to do it. That said you have countries with major websites blocked like russia or china, while it upset many people censored internet is also a strong tool to brainwash people so don't assume a blockage would lead to a positive outcome.
Cosmonauticus
in reply to brachiosaurus • • •pfizer_dose
in reply to sunglocto • • •Two days from now there's a seminar happening in the capital city of my country on a technology called mesh/meshtastic(?). They claim to have found a way to send messages in blackout conditions.
I'ts difficult to find resources but here's a blogpost about it:
blog.liamcottle.com/2024/05/01…
Not saying this is our solution, but I think these sorts of ideas and re-imaginings are what we ought to be in the pursuit of right now.
Getting started with Meshtastic - Liam Cottle's Blog
blog.liamcottle.comratel
in reply to pfizer_dose • • •Captain Aggravated
in reply to pfizer_dose • • •I just ordered a couple of meshtastic transceivers. Here's what it is:
LoRa is a patented radio technique that uses some kind of fancy spread spectrum technique to give very low power sub-GHz UHF radio somewhat impressive range. We're used to a single Wi-Fi access point being able to cover about the size of a large-ish house with wireless data. I can't pick up my house Wi-Fi in my workshop at the back of my suburban property. LoRa manages to reach out several miles on the same amount of power as a Wi-Fi signal. The tradeoff is bandwidth. A typical Wi-Fi connection can stream video, LoRa isn't really practical for much more than text messaging. It is my understanding that it's designed to do things like industrial telemetry.
On top of this is built Meshtastic, an open source mesh networking protocol. You buy a little circuit board that's got a microcontroller, a LoRa transceiver and a bluetooth transceiver. You flash the Meshtastic firmware to it, and now it is a "node." "Nodes" can be configured in several ways, but in general they'll sit there and scream into the void looking for other nodes. Messages sent are like "Tell John I say hello. Pass this on Three times." If your node hears that message, it will automatically transmit "Tell John I say hello. pass this on Two times." So in that way, nodes can automatically act as repeaters.
So they have astonishing range for their band and power, and the automatic relaying of messages means a message can propagate pretty far. Mind you, it has limitations similar to old school SMS; a message is pretty strictly limited to something like 288 characters, including emoji.
Many "nodes" don't have much of an onboard UI; some do but the main intended way for the user to access a node is over bluetooth from the Meshtastic app running on an Android or iOS device. Some units do have onboard UIs or can host a web interface accessed via wi-fi or ethernet.
Meshtastic essentially forms an ad-hoc off-grid SMS-like service. The bandwidth is simply too low to allow anything like web hosting, audio or video. At a ham convention, several hundred nodes saturated the available bandwidth just with procedural pings leaving no room for actual traffic.
Encryption is permitted on this network, I wouldn't exactly plan a coup over Meshtastic but I think I could coordinate meeting friends at a restaurant without being stalked.
If your project is to abandon the internet, this may be one of many tools necessary.
pfizer_dose
in reply to Captain Aggravated • • •Woah thats insane, thanks for the summary. The stuff I had been reading about it was a bit dense for me as someone with 0 background in radio.
Maybe I'll get one and become a node
Captain Aggravated
in reply to pfizer_dose • • •wintermute
in reply to pfizer_dose • • •Meshtastic
meshtastic.orgHexesofVexes
in reply to sunglocto • • •Trouble is, there is little that can be done.
Enough folks drank the coolaid, and now we're stuck with surveillance laws masquerading as child protection laws.
Those laws can, and will, get worse over time. However, new mediums will arise, or old ones will rise to the occasion (IRC goes brr). The main thing to do is remain calm, make it a key voter issue, and watch the bastards fold right before the next election.
like this
tiredofsametab likes this.
brachiosaurus
in reply to HexesofVexes • • •What's your plan to make it a key voter issue? Lamenting about it on censored internet?
We need bulletproof alternatives and solutions.
0x0
in reply to HexesofVexes • • •XMPP has been brring for a while now.
comfy
in reply to HexesofVexes • • •You say that like the UK all sat down in a room and most of the country said "please censor me".
Skavau
in reply to sunglocto • • •For clarity, lemmy.zip had blocked them months ago because the owner of lemmy.zip is based in the UK and theoretically could actually be fined. This is not the same situation as lemmy.world.
Vanilla_PuddinFudge
in reply to Skavau • • •Guess they need to work on their authoritarian hellhole of a country.
~American
Skavau
in reply to Vanilla_PuddinFudge • • •PhilipTheBucket
in reply to sunglocto • • •These are incompatible statements lol
Tor is fine, I'm looking at this on Tor Browser right now. I would say the jank level is about 20%. Quokk.au, actually, for some weird reason has significant problems with it (significant slowness and sometimes refuses to load a page). I actually have no idea what's going on with that, but it and I think one other site are the only Fedi sites that have any kind of problem at all. The majority (but not all) news sites and things work fine. Some things do not and I have to bounce over to some normal browser. The jank level is definitely not 0, but it's bearable.
I actually do agree about needing to set up a better architecture overall. Tor is an extremely special-purpose architecture for one thing only (near-bulletproof privacy and firewall traversal even against extremely aggressive government attempts to defeat both), which is honestly a pretty fantastic start, but there's a lot more that goes into "the internet" than just slapping a slightly janky but super-safe VPN over the front of it.
The main point is: Hey! Don't badmouth Tor, it's good (and the jank level of starting from scratch instead will be super high for any forseeable future.)
CoffeeJunkie
in reply to sunglocto • • •wintermute
in reply to CoffeeJunkie • • •Explore Offline Wikipedia and Educational Content with Kiwix- Kiwix
KiwixVanilla_PuddinFudge
in reply to wintermute • • •record scratch
I was under the impression linkwarden just saved... links.
Entire webpages? Do tell!
wintermute
in reply to Vanilla_PuddinFudge • • •Results can vary a lot depending on how the page is implemented. Sometimes most of the formats are empty or broken, but I always got at least one that's usable.
rageagainstmachines
in reply to wintermute • • •wintermute
in reply to rageagainstmachines • • •But it creates a link to archive.org so you can see if there's older versions there.
rageagainstmachines
in reply to wintermute • • •wintermute
in reply to rageagainstmachines • • •The libraries are files with the data you want to host (wikipedia, stack overflow, etc).
There's a lot of applications for different platforms. Some allow to download the libraries directly, otherwise you can download them manually into a folder and tell the app where to find them.
Kiwix Applications - Access Knowledge Offline on Various Platforms- Kiwix
Kiwixrumba
in reply to rageagainstmachines • • •WorldsDumbestMan
in reply to CoffeeJunkie • • •chromodynamic
in reply to CoffeeJunkie • • •PattyMcB
in reply to sunglocto • • •l_isqof
in reply to PattyMcB • • •ivanafterall ☑️
in reply to sunglocto • • •Only tangentially related, but in the vein of privacy and circumventing surveillance, one communication idea I really like in that vein is from the show The Leftovers--the way the "Remnant" group communicates only by simple handwritten notes.
I just like the idea that something so rudimentary could theoretically overcome a lot of very high-tech snooping equipment. Good luck using your Stingray cell tower simulator to intercept my notepad scribbles.
Sp00kyB00k
in reply to ivanafterall ☑️ • • •ivanafterall ☑️
in reply to Sp00kyB00k • • •brachiosaurus
in reply to sunglocto • • •DeathByBigSad
in reply to brachiosaurus • • •Rozaŭtuno
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •Reticulum Network
reticulum.networkPaddy66
in reply to sunglocto • • •The UK moves are very worrying. We're trying to help people to move away from big tech at our site rebeltechalliance.org/
We recommend fediverse protocols wherever possible - so I'm interested in the comments here about how that is affected
Rebel Tech Alliance
www.rebeltechalliance.orgjsomae
in reply to Paddy66 • • •sobchak
in reply to sunglocto • • •If doing an overlay network (network on top of the Internet), you probably won't be able to do much better than Tor or i2p.
freedom.cs.purdue.edu/projects…
This applies to all types of anonymous networks as well (BT, Wifi, etc).
Anonymity Trilemma
Freedom Research LabOlhonestjim
in reply to sunglocto • • •Meldrik
in reply to Olhonestjim • • •ZeroNet: Decentralized websites using Bitcoin cryptography and the BitTorrent network
zeronet.io0x0
in reply to Olhonestjim • • •content-addressable, peer-to-peer hypermedia distribution protocol
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)rumba
in reply to 0x0 • • •I tried really hard to use IPFS. I set up a syncthing and did some auto-publishing scripts.
It's slow AF, and unless you pay some big player to pin your files there's only about a 1 in 10 chance of it actually being available everywhere. I had to actually peer my computers together to get sure fire access to my own data.
Then there's very little in the way of privacy. I did some JavaScript crypto self-decrypting archives that was kind of fun But with the distribution problems it just became more of a hassle to use than anything.
daniskarma
in reply to sunglocto • • •rumba
in reply to daniskarma • • •manicdave
in reply to rumba • • •BC_viper
in reply to sunglocto • • •Agent641
in reply to BC_viper • • •rumba
in reply to BC_viper • • •planish
in reply to sunglocto • • •Something like Tor only solves half the problem. A Tor hidden service still has physical reality and a person who is hosting it, and who can be held responsible for failing to register the thing with the feds or file a moderation transparency report or whatever the latest nonsense is. The anonymity network helps to hide where the equipment and who the operator is, but there's still a single point of failure and a person to blame for the community.
We need a way to run online communities that are not online services: no single point of failure, no individual or partnership describable as a service's operator, and no meaningful way in which one person provides access to the system to another person.
Misk
in reply to planish • • •Misk
in reply to Misk • • •SolarPunker
in reply to sunglocto • • •comfy
in reply to sunglocto • • •I don't think this is true. It's a bit complicated because there are ways to obfuscate the traffic, but generally speaking, I'd assume governments could track and block nodes just as easily as you can find them.
It might trip you up for real-time things like gaming and you might take a while to download HUGE files, but it's much faster than its historical reputation
This is true for any privacy software. Encrypted chats, cryptographic currency, darknets. Even the internet itself has that reputation. Anyone trying to hide what they're doing is likely to seek privacy tools. Reputation means nothing.
SocialMediaRefugee
in reply to sunglocto • • •HugeNerd
in reply to SocialMediaRefugee • • •