How each US senator voted on the Republican plan to avert shutdown
Tracker: how each US senator voted on the Republican plan to avert shutdown
US Senate rejects Republican plan to keep funding flowing as each party mostly unites to block other’s proposalAndrew Witherspoon (The Guardian)
Trump Gaza "Peace Plan" Is A DYSTOPIAN Lie - w/. Muhammad Shehada
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
Salesforce users grumble after Agentforce AI replaces search on some help pages
Salesforce users grumble after Agentforce AI replaces search on some help pages
: This is one way to add a lot of AI users in a hurry, which Wall Street wants to seeIain Thomson (The Register)
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Bisan Owda (wizard_bisan1) TikTok Collection (December 2021 - September 2024) : Bisan Owda : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive
Bisan Owda (wizard_bisan1) TikTok Collection (December 2021 - September 2024) : Bisan Owda : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive
This archive contains TikTok videos from Palestinian journalist, activist, and filmmaker Bisan Owda (@wizard_bisan1), spanning from December 15, 2021 to...Internet Archive
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hud site down due to rant on main page
"The Radical Left are going to shut down the government and inflict massive pain on the American people unless they get their $1.5 trillion wish list of demands. The Trump administration wants to keep the government open for the American people."
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How to Get Hardware Transcoding BACK on Your Synology NAS
Synology’s 2025 refresh brought the DS225+ and DS425+ with the familiar Intel Celeron J4125, but it also quietly removed the kernel graphics driver support that Plex, Jellyfin, and Emby use for hardware transcoding of H.264 and HEVC. This guide explains what changed, why it matters for real-world streaming, and how you can restore GPU-accelerated transcoding on these models using an unofficial SSH method shared by the community. If you rely on your NAS to reshape 4K or high bitrate files for phones, tablets, hotel TVs, or limited connections, this walkthrough will help you get that efficiency back.
How to Get Hardware Transcoding BACK on Your Synology NAS
Get Graphics Drivers and Hardware Transcoding BACK for Plex/Jellyfin/Emby on your Synology NAS Note - the video on this fix will be published soon and I will update this article with images ASAP.NAS Compares
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I'm looking for a NAS and Synology was on the top of my list. But their new models only support Synology HDDs. That is already a huge red flag. And now that. Feels like Synology really doesn't care about their customers...
I might go with a self build solution.
Tile trackers are a stalker's dream, say Georgia Tech researchers
Tile trackers are a stalker's dream, say Georgia Tech researchers
: Plaintext transmissions, fixed MAC addresses, rotating 'unique' IDs, and more, make abuse easyBrandon Vigliarolo (The Register)
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MALIBAL Has Returned Again!! by Brodie Robertson from Sep 30, 2025 (Video) [20:28 min]
- Invidious: inv.nadeko.net/watch?v=LitmByf…
- YouTube:
Video description (only parts about the video itself):
Do you remember about a year ago when MALIBAL went to war with the coreboot project banning all the countries that the coreboot developers were from, and now they want to be the future of US laptop manufacturing.
==========Resources==========
Malibal Coreboot: www.malibal.com/features/dont-support-the-coreboot…
Previous Malibal Video: • MALIBAL Goes To War With Coreboot
Malibal Project Liberation: www.malibal.com/features/project-liberation/
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
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Bluesky rolls out age verification for users in Ohio | TechCrunch
Bluesky rolls out age verification for users in Ohio | TechCrunch
Users in Ohio will have to verify their age to use Bluesky's social network as of Monday.Sarah Perez (TechCrunch)
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Goodwill Isn’t a Platform (thoughts on the Digg beta)
The new Digg feels a lot like the same ole’ Reddit. The mobile app is basically a clone, even down to the pointless “Trending” bar at the top.
There’s no API support yet, no plan for federation, and no guardrails to stop the slow slide into bloat (notice the Digg Daily AI podcast?) and ads we’ve all seen before.
Right now the only thing holding it together is the community, and the goodwill of Kevin Rose and the team. I respect them, but goodwill isn’t a plan.
Leadership changes. Platforms change. When money starts talking, users always pay the price.
No federation? No thank you.
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I'll comment on that story on the screenshot
Printer with DRM-free inkUses HP cartridges
Those two sentences are mutually exclusive
ICE Warden Put Transgender Detainees into slavery
A transgender Mexican national held in an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Louisiana has told Newsweek that he endured months of physical and emotional abuse in federal custody, beginning long before President Donald Trump was sworn in.
Monica Renteria-Gonzalez is one of four detainees, three of whom are transgender, alleging systemic abuse at the hands of a former ICE assistant warden, who they say created a work program which was used to penalize and demean them at a center designed to hold women.
“It got to the point where he would harass me everywhere that I went,” Renteria-Gonzalez, who identifies as a male, told Newsweek in an interview from the South Louisiana Detention Center in Basile.
https://www.newsweek.com/ice-detention-louisiana-transgender-detainees-abuse-complaint-10483607
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Japan's beer-making giant Asahi stops production after cyberattack
A day after one of Japan's biggest brewers, Asahi Group, announced it suspended production due to a cyberattack, the company said it has no timeline for its recovery.
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“At this time, there has been no confirmed leakage of personal information or customer data to external parties,” the press release read.
PayPal's Honey to integrate with ChatGPT and other AIs for shopping assistance
The features will provide AI chatbot users, who are researching items they want to purchase, Honey's product recommendations, pricing, and access to deals.
PayPal's Honey to integrate with ChatGPT and other AIs for shopping assistance | TechCrunch
PayPal's Honey will now with with ChatGPT to find shopping deals.Sarah Perez (TechCrunch)
Meta reportedly buying RISC-V AI GPU firm Rivos — acquisition to bolster dev team and possibly replace Nvidia internally
Meta's internal GPU development squad will soon add to its ranks, sources say.
YouTuber unboxes what seems to be a pre-release version of an M5 iPad Pro
Signs point to a relatively mild upgrade from the 16-month-old Apple M4.
After threatening ABC over Kimmel, FCC chair may eliminate TV ownership caps
FCC is required to review TV rules and is more likely to scrap them under Carr.
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Ted Cruz blocks bill that would extend privacy protections to all Americans
The Texas senator blocked a bill that would have prevented data brokers from selling personal data on anyone in the United States, and not just federal lawmakers and government officials.
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Intel and AMD trusted enclaves, the backbone of network security, fall to physical attacks
The chipmakers say physical attacks aren’t in the threat model. Many users didn’t get the memo.
Microsoft moves to the uncanny valley with creepy Copilot avatars that stare at you and say your name
Yep, we're sure that will win folks over
Microsoft moves to the uncanny valley with creepy Copilot avatars that stare at you and say your name
: Yep, we're sure that will win folks overIain Thomson (The Register)
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Microsoft moves to the uncanny valley with creepy Copilot avatars that stare at you and say your name
Yep, we're sure that will win folks over
Microsoft moves to the uncanny valley with creepy Copilot avatars that stare at you and say your name
: Yep, we're sure that will win folks overIain Thomson (The Register)
Anonymous question app Sendit deceived children and illegally collected their data, FTC alleges
On Sendit, teens can send each other anonymous questions via integrations with Instagram or Snapchat.
Google is blocking AI searches for Trump and dementia
With Biden, AI Mode will provide a summarized answer.
Google is blocking AI searches for Trump and dementia
Google does not show AI search results for the query “does trump show signs of dementia” even though it will show AI search results for similar searches about other presidents.Jay Peters (The Verge)
adhocfungus likes this.
That is not when they launched their AI. A link in that very link of yours goes to an article from August 2024 about Google’s AI overview being updated then:
tomsguide.com/computing/search…
It came out loooooong before March 2025 lol
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/AI_Ove…
AI Overviews was first introduced as part of Google's Search Generative Experience (SGE), which was unveiled at the Google I/O conference in May 2023.[1] In May 2024, the feature was rebranded as AI Overviews
Then there was months of crap like this:
politifact.com/article/2024/au…
Where “bugs” in meta, Google, etcs products all just so happened to not autocomplete for trump, pretended the assassination attempt was “misinformation”, returned pro Harris results if you searched for trump, and so on.
What’s up with Meta, Google 2024 search results?
Are Google and Meta putting their Big Tech thumbs on the scale to tilt the election in Vice President Kamala Harris’ fav@politifact
AI Overviews is content taken from existing sites, AI Mode is content generate entirely by an LLM model (which article in this post talks about). PolitiFact in reference to Google talks about autofill search feature which predates "AI" since it was released in 2004.
If you want people to take your aguments seriously, don't mistort the facts to get your point across. Maybe Google fucked with their search algorithm or modified the weights to prefer some sources over others in the AI Overviews, but they couldn't fuck with AI Mode since it didn't exist then.
Oregon National Guard Leader Laments Portland Deployment
EXCLUSIVE: Leaked letter from Guard leader levels with troops on unpopular mission
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Louisiana governor asks for national guard deployment to New Orleans
Jeff Landry’s request comes as crime trends analyst says New Orleans has had fewest murders since 1970
The Donald Trump-supporting Republican governor of Louisiana has asked for national guard troops to be deployed to New Orleans and other cities through fiscal year 2026, saying Monday that the state needs help fighting crime and praising the president’s decision to send the military to Washington DC and Memphis.
Governor Jeff Landry asked for the Trump administration to support an extended deployment of 1,000 troops in a letter sent to the Pentagon’s top official, Pete Hegseth. It comes weeks after Trump suggested New Orleans could be one of his next targets for deploying the national guard to fight crime.
Preliminary data from the New Orleans police department shows that there had been 75 homicides so far in 2025 – including 14 who were killed on New Year’s Day when a terrorist aimed a truck attack on Bourbon Street. There were 124 homicides in 2024. In 2023, there were 193.
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Raspberry witbier
Regular infusion mash, light belgian style witbier bill. Perle, IBU about 15. Wild forest raspberries in secondary, 200g/L. Yeast BLG201, our own.
OG 1057, final does not make much sense because with berries, but it's 1008.
Very pronounced spices, hops, and raspberries, balanced! Apparently, berries accentuated the hops. Slightly tart, dangerously drinkable. Well carbonated naturally under a month.
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So you just throw some berries in to secondary?
I will finally make my cherry beer next week (had a issue with strong ale so I didn't had free fermenter), so I am interested in the use of berries.
My plan is to put some in primary and then put few in each bottle, because I don't have the setup to bottle from keg.
Yes, it was fermented for a week or two before addition of berries, and about same time again on secondary. I do not use kegs at all, those are just glass jars with locks. Most simple gear. This gorgeous foam comes from just a bit of sugar priming on bottling.
Putting berries in primary is imo not very good approach: mostly because most of the flavor would bubble away, but also because there is somewhat higher contamination chance.
There is no chance anything would survive with fresh vigorous yeast and at high alcohol levels/low oxygen on secondary. I used to sanitize berries in my first attempts, but later found it to be unnecessary. I even boiled my first mead!
Sometimes I freeze berries though, but only to save them till beer is ready, or to promote conversion in cranberries or rowan.
How big.... Is my Privacy Penis 🍆
Am typing this message with FUTO keyboard, on GrapheneOS, using Voyager APP to access the Fediverss, installed via Obtanium, routed through a TOR VPN 🤔
Am I private yet?
Because on a dark and stormy night some times I feel I should just buy an iPhone and be done with it 🤣
don't like this
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'Disbelief': Pentagon reporter can't find one military official who liked Hegseth's speech
'Disbelief': Pentagon reporter can't find one military official who liked Hegseth's speech
Longtime Pentagon reporter Helene Cooper said that she can't find any military officials who attended the meeting in Virginia with President Donald Trump and Secretary Pete Hegseth and liked what they heard.Sarah K. Burris (Raw Story)
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With new agent mode for Excel and Word, Microsoft touts “vibe working”
With a new set of Microsoft 365 features, knowledge workers will be able to generate complex Word documents or Excel spreadsheets using only text prompts to Microsoft's chat bot. Two distinct products were announced, each using different models and accessed from within different tools—though the similar names Microsoft chose make it confusing to parse what's what.
Driven by OpenAI's GPT-5 large language model, Agent Mode is built into Word and Excel, and it allows the creation of complex documents and spreadsheets from user prompts. It's called "agent" mode because it doesn't just work from the prompt in a single step; rather, it plans multi-step work and runs a validation loop in the hopes of ensuring quality.
It's only available in the web versions of Word and Excel at present, but the plan is to bring it to native desktop applications later.
With new agent mode for Excel and Word, Microsoft touts “vibe working”
Agent Mode in Word, Excel works like vibe coding tools but for knowledge work.Samuel Axon (Ars Technica)
Inside the Fight Against Trump's Alaskan Pipe Dream
Inside the Fight Against Trump's Alaska LNG Pipeline
Donald Trump is using Alaska and a proposed LNG pipeline to kickstart his fossil-fueled "National Energy Dominance" agenda. Alaskans are resisting.Antonia Juhasz (Rolling Stone)
Dem Says Mike Johnson Is Delaying Her Swearing-In to Prevent Epstein Vote
* archive.today
* web.archive.org — text blurred. On desktop, you can select it to unblur
* ghostarchive.org — still loading when I posted
Adelita Grijalva Says Swearing In Ceremony Delayed Over Epstein Vote
Newly elected Arizona Rep. Adelita Grijalva says her swearing in ceremony has been delayed over her support for a petition to release Epstein files.Nikki McCann Ramirez (Rolling Stone)
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Developers drop Vercel, call for boycott after CEO posts selfie with Netanyahu
Cloud hosting platform Vercel is under fire after its CEO, Guillermo Rauch, shared a photo of a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday.The image, which Rauch framed around discussions of AI education and “keeping our free societies ahead”, was immediately read as a political statement given Israel’s genocide in Gaza.
Within hours, developers and users across social media declared they were cancelling their Vercel subscriptions, deleting accounts, and migrating projects to competitors like Netlify, Cloudflare Pages, Fly.io, and Render.
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three
in reply to Tony Bark • • •As someone with nothing to hide, I'm ok with this.
Edit: Bunch of perverts, sexual harassers, and scammers on lemmy huh? Only cements my stance on increased police presence....
TryingSomethingNew
in reply to three • • •If you give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of men, I will find something in them which will hang him.
[Cardinal Richelieu]
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Beacon likes this.
This is fine🔥🐶☕🔥
in reply to three • • •vladmech
in reply to This is fine🔥🐶☕🔥 • • •Risky post of the day
Edit: why are you downvoting me? You may get a butthole pic from this! That feels risky haha
鳳凰院 凶真 (Hououin Kyouma)
in reply to This is fine🔥🐶☕🔥 • • •Let me show you my budhole
It's a place where my buddies hang out!
TommySoda
in reply to three • • •three
in reply to TommySoda • • •Truscape
in reply to three • • •🤣 why would they? All that is already for sale, pally. Find a data broker, fork over twenty bucks, and all that info is fair game. Hell, fire up a TOR client, find a data breach that contains your device's MAC address or static IP, pay five or ten bucks, and same deal, but now I can drain your credit card.
Don't like it? Well the data comes from somewhere, unregulated floodgates of data collection to be bought, resold and scrutinized (or stolen). Nothing to hide, eh?
w3dd1e
in reply to three • • •I don’t need to show you a badge. No one does. I can’t just go get your info from the data broker.
Perhaps you see the problem here…
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Beacon likes this.
/home/pineapplelover
in reply to w3dd1e • • •I believe there has been a case of this. I remember a person phished some service to give them access to a person's account or account data under the guise of "lives are on the line here". Might've also spoofed the email, but either way, he managed to get it
Edit: something like this
gizmodo.com/hackers-are-using-…
Hackers Are Using Police Emails to Send Tech Companies Fraudulent Data Requests
Thomas Maxwell (Gizmodo)Truscape
in reply to /home/pineapplelover • • •/home/pineapplelover
in reply to Truscape • • •w3dd1e
in reply to /home/pineapplelover • • •Railing5132
in reply to three • • •Since due process is off the table, we've determined (without a trial) that you're not a citizen, and you're being deported to a country you've never been to, where they will imprison you at our request, and they don't speak any language you do.
Why? Because we're ICE. Fuck you.
TommySoda
in reply to three • • •webp
in reply to three • • •鳳凰院 凶真 (Hououin Kyouma)
in reply to webp • • •IsoKiero
in reply to 鳳凰院 凶真 (Hououin Kyouma) • • •Midnight Wolf
in reply to three • • •Take your clothes off then, and burn them, if you've 'got nothing to hide'. Let's see your address and ssn. Where do you work, and what position do you hold?
Oh, suddenly you have changed your stance on the matter... funny how that works.
Try searching for yourself and let the realization and dread set in that most of those hypothetical questions I just asked, I can find out, without needing to ask you directly - because you've given them away, while having 'nothing to hide'.
BrianTheeBiscuiteer
in reply to three • • •/home/pineapplelover
in reply to three • • •鳳凰院 凶真 (Hououin Kyouma)
in reply to three • • •UltraGiGaGigantic
in reply to three • • •ragebutt
in reply to three • • •ramenshaman
in reply to three • • •Do you want to live in 1984? Because this is how we get to 1984.
themurphy
in reply to three • • •sadfitzy
in reply to three • • •Hominine
in reply to three • • •pleaseletmein
in reply to three • • •treadful
in reply to Tony Bark • • •Thanks for including the mirror, OP.
I really despise these practices. I don't know how people can build these tools with a clear conscience.
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Beacon likes this.
otacon239
in reply to treadful • • •Venator
in reply to otacon239 • • •Or you use confirmation bias to tell yourself it's an innocuous use case that won't hurt anyone.
Or you use a bandwagon argument like "everybody else is doing it, so why can't we" or "everybody else is doing it so it doesn't make much difference if we do too"
Or you use a library for ads such as the google-ads-api npm package, without checking it, so you don't realise how much data it's collecting on your users...
otacon239
in reply to Venator • • •Basic Glitch
in reply to otacon239 • • •interdimensionalmeme
in reply to treadful • • •Because if they don't their masters they will become destitute and starve while homeless
And all social interaction happen at veiled gunpoint
Under these conditions it is no surprise at all that conscience plays no role whatsoever, it is just a savage free-for-all for survival happening under our cursed star, an insane 10 billion years long churning of thinking meat, consciousness behind birthed into the wreckage, screaming uncomprehendingly at what is happened until it soon it is just as easily, mercifully and meaninglessly snuffed out again.
Fortunately we have a shot at scorching the surface of this planet thanks to global warming and really the question is, can we make it happen before we genocide ourselves, leaving this planet's biosphere still capable of sustaining the horrors of life ?
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treadful
in reply to interdimensionalmeme • • •interdimensionalmeme
in reply to treadful • • •They thought the government cared about them.
One wanted to upgrade their car to add another 100 horsepower they cannot use anywhere.
Another told me, he does not like raising cows but he had to get more cows to make it more economical to raise cows.
They were all bummed out that the end of the end of the week was upon us, and soon they would have to work 40 hours in the next 5 days, doing things they stopped liking doing a long time again, if they ever did at all.
Cruxifux
in reply to treadful • • •Beacon
in reply to Cruxifux • • •like this
Beacon likes this.
Cruxifux
in reply to Beacon • • •SL3wvmnas
in reply to Cruxifux • • •Advanced Privacy - know all about it
/e/OS communitylimerod
in reply to Cruxifux • • •You can instead use apps which block trackers. I can recommend 3.
Netguard with tracker filters enabled, PersonalDNS filter – a fire and forget DNS filter app, or Adguard android app from Adguard website.
The 1st one needs payment to access some pro features but can also block internet connection to all your apps.
The 2nd one is a simple DNS blocker which can have millions of rules and won't choke under the load.
The last one is not Foss or available on fdroid like the 1st two are, but is much more powerful than the 1st two combined.
Pick your tools and limit information now.
grue
in reply to treadful • • •Have you seen the job market for programmers lately? It feels like it's almost all for AI slop, abusive rentier middleman business models that add no real value, ~~defense~~ war contractors, or all of the above at once.
That's not to say that it's acceptable for people to work those jobs with a clear conscience; it's to say that for a bunch of people the only ethical options would be to remain unemployed or leave the industry.
njordomir
in reply to grue • • •I've been seeing exactly that. Reading through these job descriptions is a bit depressing. I can't virtue signal my lack of morality and unthinking subservience to my potential employer hard enough to make cutoff to become "Director of AI Shilling" or a "Dark Pattern Consent Violation Engineer".
I know the kind of environments that won't work for me. This will always limit the jobs I can and can't work and I'm generally okay with that. I would love some of that bountiful defence contractor money, but I can't ethically justify doing work that harms others or limits their freedom. Advertising tech would have been a good fit for me... if I had no sense of ethics.
It's a tough realization that my gaming consoles, GPS Smart Watch, and fancy modern over-engineered car only became possible because tons of money was poured into building out related tech for defence and surveillance.
I imagine the cognitive dissonance must be really strong in someone working for some of these companies that have monetized governmentally sanctioned or corporately opportunistic civil rights abuses. Then again, we're often kept apart, working in our own little areas where we're safe from having to see the whole horrifying machine.
gravitas_deficiency
in reply to treadful • • •It’s the same for anyone who works for Meta or MS or Google or Anduril or whatever these days: you look at your comp package that’s worth roughly half a million annually, and you say
They have been paying people to not have morals for quite a while now.
Arondeus
in reply to Tony Bark • • •Truscape
in reply to Arondeus • • •GrapheneOS already runs google play services in a sandbox that doesn't have core access to the device's functionality (you can lie about giving apps storage access or location data, for example), and because you already have alternatives to ad-based services (CoMaps, Thunderbird, etc...) you should be safe from telemetry often hidden inside of popular apps like Google Maps.
Nothing's bulletproof, of course, but the difference with GrapheneOS is that you can see what's going on, grant permissions selectively to certain apps, or opt out entirely by only installing F-droid apps or using Graphene's FOSS suite. You don't have pre-baked telemetry at all, so nothing for them to harvest.
DandomRude
in reply to Tony Bark • • •What was it...
Hmm...
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Tony Bark
in reply to DandomRude • • •like this
Maeve likes this.
DandomRude
in reply to Tony Bark • • •Gotham | Palantir
Palantirlike this
PokyDokie e Maeve like this.
Alaknár
in reply to DandomRude • • •like this
Maeve likes this.
DandomRude
in reply to Alaknár • • •Yes, maybe a bit much, but it would have been very fitting, since the marketing is obviously aimed specifically at the villains of the world—perhaps for the next project.
It's quite telling of the times we live in that you can make it so obvious these days. You'd think that at least some concealment of the intentions behind these mass surveillance products would be appropriate, but I guess with people like Trump in the White House, Putin in the Kremlin, Netanyahu in Israel, and many others of that caliber, it's no longer necessary.
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Maeve likes this.
Maeve
in reply to DandomRude • • •nucleative
in reply to Tony Bark • • •like this
PokyDokie likes this.
Holytimes
in reply to nucleative • • •like this
PokyDokie likes this.
ReginaPhalange
in reply to Holytimes • • •Ok take a nap....
But then fire ze missiles!
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PokyDokie likes this.
barnaclebutt
in reply to Tony Bark • • •like this
PokyDokie likes this.
StefanT
in reply to barnaclebutt • • •mostlikelyaperson
in reply to StefanT • • •Truscape
in reply to StefanT • • •like this
Maeve likes this.
StefanT
in reply to Truscape • • •barnaclebutt
in reply to StefanT • • •answersplease77
in reply to barnaclebutt • • •like this
Maeve likes this.
muusemuuse
in reply to StefanT • • •A Linux phone could theoretically use other networks. You could pipe traffic through I2P or bounce it around multiple network types with reticulum. It’s actually theoretically possible to make a community mesh that doesn’t need cellular at all. I don’t NEED to carry the entire internet with me everywhere. I can carry a device with a cache of stuff I need but for everything else I can just connect to some sort of network to fetch it when I actually need it on demand.
A Linux phone would let you do that. You can explore that possibility. Android and IPhone will never allow that because latency is shot on the alternative networks and they aren’t expensive enough to make a profit off of.
Korhaka
in reply to barnaclebutt • • •ronigami
in reply to Korhaka • • •sigmaklimgrindset
in reply to Tony Bark • • •Bro...my weather app is selling my data? 😦
I just wanted up-to-date travel conditions in a convenient widget. My taxes already pay for the meteorology, why do they need to sell my data too??
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Sir_Kevin
in reply to sigmaklimgrindset • • •Alaknár
in reply to Sir_Kevin • • •Sir_Kevin
in reply to Alaknár • • •Nearly every weather app that exists is repackaging data from an official, tax funded source. Apps using weather underground data possibly being the only exception.
Show me one that doesn't want location permissions and such. So now they've got Your data and can do as they please with it.
Alaknár
in reply to Sir_Kevin • • •The weather source. Not the application source. A dude needs to sit down and write that part.
Sir_Kevin
in reply to Alaknár • • •Alaknár
in reply to Sir_Kevin • • •Sir_Kevin
in reply to Alaknár • • •Alaknár
in reply to Sir_Kevin • • •dafta
in reply to Sir_Kevin • • •Breezy Weather
Not affiliated, just discovered this amazing app relatively recently.
GitHub - breezy-weather/breezy-weather: A feature-rich weather app with good visualizations and more than 50 sources.
GitHubSir_Kevin
in reply to dafta • • •I think the last time I tried a bunch, it came down to Breezy and Cirrus. I think they're pretty similar but I settled on Cirrus for whatever reason. Here's a link for anyone interested.
f-droid.org/packages/org.wohel…
Cirrus | F-Droid - Free and Open Source Android App Repository
f-droid.orgAbidanYre
in reply to Sir_Kevin • • •Sir_Kevin
in reply to AbidanYre • • •jve
in reply to AbidanYre • • •No it doesn’t.
It just needs to know what cities you care about.
sadfitzy
in reply to Sir_Kevin • • •Alaknár
in reply to sigmaklimgrindset • • •If you want the weather info sponsored by your taxes, use the browser.
If you want a convenient widget, someone needs to make it, and the developer who made that widget needs to eat too.
You can either buy an app or pay with your data.
ExcessShiv
in reply to Alaknár • • •No this implies you get a choice, which you don't. You can get it for free and sell your data, or you can pay for it...and still also sell your data. The real money is in the data, they won't give that up...ever.
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themurphy
in reply to ExcessShiv • • •ExcessShiv
in reply to themurphy • • •dafta
in reply to ExcessShiv • • •GitHub - breezy-weather/breezy-weather: A feature-rich weather app with good visualizations and more than 50 sources.
GitHubhumanspiral
in reply to themurphy • • •themurphy
in reply to humanspiral • • •humanspiral
in reply to themurphy • • •themurphy
in reply to humanspiral • • •Maeve
in reply to themurphy • • •Alaknár
in reply to ExcessShiv • • •Yeah, that's true. Often people will take the money from users AND from selling data. But you can (usually) verify if that's the case by checking the app's permissions required.
The point stands, however: you either pay for the software with money, or with data - with the only exception being the unusually rare FOSS project here and there, which either lives in relative obscurity or grows to become large enough for the creators to either start requiring money, or just fold under the load...
dafta
in reply to Alaknár • • •GitHub - breezy-weather/breezy-weather: A feature-rich weather app with good visualizations and more than 50 sources.
GitHubsigmaklimgrindset
in reply to dafta • • •sadfitzy
in reply to Alaknár • • •He can eat without selling people's data.
This isn't about putting food on the table and you're a dipshit if you believe otherwise.
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Alaknár
in reply to sadfitzy • • •Yes. By making your app paid, not free. 90% of Apple Store/Google Play store users don't want to pay for apps with their money.
You're childishly naive if you think it's malice 100% of the way top to bottom.
sadfitzy
in reply to Alaknár • • •No, by doing something else with his life because developing an app is not an all-encompassing behavior.
No, I'm just not a useful idiot going to bat for people making money off of me.
I, personally, have made significantly more complicated apps than what you're defending and I don't charge money for it or harvest my user's data. I'm also not alone.
If we can do it, why can't this scumbag? Oh yeah, because he has useful idiots like you going to bat for him.
Please, tell me more about how ignorant and innocent you are. It's cute and predictable.
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Alaknár
in reply to sadfitzy • • •Buddy, are you suggesting that software developers should "do something else to earn money"?
Are you high right now?
Go ahead. Quote the bit where anyone in this thread is batting for anybody.
I'm becoming fairly certain that you are high. What exactly am I defending....?
We can't have a discussion if you don't understand some simple facts of life. Such as: "people need to eat", or "eating costs money", or "not everybody has the privilege of being a software developer as a side-gig", or "not everybody wants or can be a farmer".
Get sober, then read what you wrote again.
sadfitzy
in reply to Alaknár • • •Yeah, morons like you will fight tooth and nail to avoid admitting you're being taken for a ride.
It's in your blood and I don't expect more.
Keep being stupid.
Alaknár
in reply to sadfitzy • • •sadfitzy
in reply to Alaknár • • •like this
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Maeve
in reply to Alaknár • • •frongt
in reply to Alaknár • • •Alaknár
in reply to frongt • • •Bytemeister
in reply to sigmaklimgrindset • • •Yeah, but it got privatized, so now you need to pay more money to a 3rd party to access the services you are already paying money to access.
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4am
in reply to Bytemeister • • •Bytemeister
in reply to 4am • • •lemonySplit
in reply to sigmaklimgrindset • • •Breezy Weather | F-Droid - Free and Open Source Android App Repository
f-droid.orgMrSulu
in reply to Tony Bark • • •minorkeys
in reply to Tony Bark • • •AngryRobot
in reply to minorkeys • • •like this
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portuga
in reply to Tony Bark • • •Resonosity
in reply to portuga • • •SlartyBartFast
in reply to Tony Bark • • •Railing5132
in reply to SlartyBartFast • • •Bytemeister
in reply to Railing5132 • • •brachiosaurus
in reply to Tony Bark • • •They already have it
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_sur…
intricate surveillance of an entire or a substantial fraction of a population
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)Formfiller
in reply to Tony Bark • • •like this
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DarkFuture
in reply to Formfiller • • •Nope.
He should be tried and executed for treason, but those in leadership positions in our country have betrayed their oaths. That means we all need to be armed to the fucking teeth as soon as possible.
betanumerus
in reply to Tony Bark • • •filcuk
in reply to betanumerus • • •Southrydge Freedom
in reply to filcuk • • •meliaesc
in reply to Southrydge Freedom • • •muusemuuse
in reply to Southrydge Freedom • • •Southrydge Freedom
in reply to muusemuuse • • •jve
in reply to betanumerus • • •FTFY
betanumerus
in reply to Tony Bark • • •interdimensionalmeme
in reply to betanumerus • • •like this
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Garbagio
in reply to interdimensionalmeme • • •like this
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Rivalarrival
in reply to betanumerus • • •Privacy policies are irrelevant here. They are picking up unique data as your phone communicates with a cell tower. You can do it with a $15 RTL-SDR receiver.
Get a hundred receivers and you can pinpoint anybody in a city.
LordCrom
in reply to betanumerus • • •Rivalarrival
in reply to LordCrom • • •They don't need the cooperation of telecom providers. They receive the same signal you send to the cell tower. Even if the signal is encrypted so they can't see what you are sending, they can identify that you are sending.
With enough receivers listening, they can identify your location to a pretty high accuracy.
Sam_Bass
in reply to Tony Bark • • •like this
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ssillyssadass
in reply to Tony Bark • • •SlippiHUD
in reply to Tony Bark • • •thermal_shock
in reply to SlippiHUD • • •Teal
in reply to Tony Bark • • •Some choices to help would be to avoid using precise location for weather apps. Course is usually very good unless you're a weather tracking hobbyist. If you're not using ad blocking it's never a bad time to start.
Ad blocking in browser is good but combined with a DNS service that offers block lists like Hagezi's options it's great. These lists can block a lot of tracking and telemetry data and not just the ads themselves. ControlD and NextDNS are two solid options. NextDNS doesn't offer Hagezi Threat Intelligence Feeds specifically but have their own proprietary version. The company claims it covers much of Hagezi's lists but I haven't compared.
ControlD has a 30 day free trial period with two plans either $20 or $40 per year. The $40 per year option has a future called Redirect. Their description "Spoof various web services, apps and platforms to geo-distributed proxy locations and appear to be in a different country".
NextDNS has a free plan that can be used on multiple devices. Paid is $20 per year for unlimited. The catch to the free plan is it's good for 300,000 queries per month. If you get close they email a warning and if you go over the service will still work as a DNS but without the blocking. It will automatically start again the next cycle.
Here's the Hagezi GitHub but other lists are good too like OISD and AdGuard lists.
github.com/hagezi/dns-blocklis…
I use Ultimate but that may be too restricted for some. It will break websites and apps like FaceBook, WhatsApp, Instagram. If you use those a slightly less strict list a better choice. You'll still get protection but there's a balance to everyone's needs so do read up on each list and what makes sense for you.
All that wrapped in a trusted VPN and you're doing pretty well. Nothing is perfect and if a government power wants to know where you are this isn't going to stop them. For me that's not what this is for. I use this stuff against the ads and tracking crap everywhere. I'm not trying to hide and can't really offer much regarding that.
I'm maybe a bit over the top compared to some. If this all sounds crazy a simple ad blocker (AdGuard, uBlock Origin) in browser and course location for weather and anything else location based that makes sense is a solid start. You can always whitelist websites you wish to support via ad revenue if that's an interest.
GitHub - hagezi/dns-blocklists: DNS-Blocklists: For a better internet - keep the internet clean!
GitHubmodus
in reply to Teal • • •Teal
in reply to modus • • •Yes they can be used with a PiHole. I don't use one so I can't offer much for set up. On the GitHub page each list version has various links depending on the format needed for where it will be used. For example, PiHole is under the Adblock format which works with (Pi-hole, AdGuard, AdGuard Home, eBlocker, uBlock Origin, Brave (only in aggressive mode), AdNauseam, Little Snitch Mini).
In my research about this stuff I saw many people talking about these lists for their own home DNS set up. Good luck!
modus
in reply to Teal • • •PiHole lists are pretty simple. They're just plaintext.
potoooooooo ☑️
in reply to Tony Bark • • •ArmchairAce1944
in reply to Tony Bark • • •So they will know where I have been? Even though I am not American... I remember when the British government demanded that Apple give them that kind of information on all iPhone users all over the world and Apple told them to go fuck themselves.
This is some real bullshit.
cyberwitch
in reply to ArmchairAce1944 • • •UK government tries again to access encrypted Apple customer data: Report | TechCrunch
Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai (TechCrunch)ArmchairAce1944
in reply to cyberwitch • • •Because they will never quit. Ever. We need to get lucky and stop them every time (and I feel powerless beyond signing some petition online and maybe making a donation), but they need to get lucky once.
And I cannot recall a single time that such laws were ever repealed. The patriot act has had some questionable efficacy and now ICE and the Trump administration want so many more additions that there is just no going back.
Even in Canada, which never had an issue with terrorism, has passed many laws heavily infringing on people's freedoms and are trying to pass the biggest one yet with Bill C-2, even though it actually weakens border protections and gives American companies far, far more ability to surveil Canadians than ever before. This is when violence and terror threats have been greatly diminishing for years (and not because of some BS laws).
muusemuuse
in reply to ArmchairAce1944 • • •andallthat
in reply to Tony Bark • • •betanumerus
in reply to andallthat • • •NoodlePoint
in reply to Tony Bark • • •altphoto
in reply to Tony Bark • • •NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ
in reply to altphoto • • •Definitely considering looking into portable Faraday cages...
Guess it doesn't really matter when the license plate on my car is tracked everywhere I go and all the big businesses use face identification the moment you walk into their stores, probably all run by the same vendor and packaged and sold to the highest bidder.
I hate this dystopia.
altphoto
in reply to NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ • • •GreenKnight23
in reply to altphoto • • •muusemuuse
in reply to altphoto • • •altphoto
in reply to muusemuuse • • •muusemuuse
in reply to altphoto • • •FE80
in reply to Tony Bark • • •Meet Rayhunter: A New Open Source Tool from EFF to Detect Cellular Spying
Electronic Frontier FoundationEdgarallenpwn
in reply to FE80 • • •FE80
in reply to Edgarallenpwn • • •Install the android developer tools, or whatever it is that includes the adb utility. Download the software from the EFF & run the install script while your device is plugged in via usb.
github.com/EFForg/rayhunter/re…
Releases · EFForg/rayhunter
GitHubPissingIntoTheWind
in reply to Tony Bark • • •Anonymaus
in reply to PissingIntoTheWind • • •reuters.com/article/world/us-s…
bbc.com/news/world-europe-5730…
NSA spying row: Denmark accused of helping US spy on European officials
BBC NewsPissingIntoTheWind
in reply to Anonymaus • • •SulaymanF
in reply to Anonymaus • • •Bluefalcon
in reply to Tony Bark • • •KulunkelBoom
in reply to Tony Bark • • •alekwithak
in reply to KulunkelBoom • • •Yggstyle
in reply to alekwithak • • •Korhaka
in reply to Tony Bark • • •Microtonal_Banana
in reply to Tony Bark • • •