🦁🐆 It’s lion versus leopard this #MosaicMonday! This stunning scene comes from the Casa delle Colombe a mosaico at Pompeii. It seems the lion truly has the upper hand, standing over the prone leopard. The power of the lion’s claws are matched by its direct stare at the viewer.
🏛️ MAN Napoli (inv. no. 114282)
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Das Bild zeigt eine Einkaufsrechnung von EDEKA Conic, einem deutschen Supermarkt. Die Rechnung ist auf einem weißen Papier mit schwarzer Druckerschrift gedruckt und befindet sich auf einem bunten Teppich. Die Rechnung enthält die folgenden Informationen:
- Unternehmen: EDEKA Conic, Nettelbeck SL 8, 40477 Düsseldorf-Berendorf, Tel. 0211 / 494111, www.edeka.de
- Artikel:
- Weidegl. Grieß: 2,89 EUR
- Oetk. Gr. Pudding: 2,79 EUR
- Oetk. Sahne Pudding: 2,79 EUR
- Posten: 3
- SUMME: 8,47 EUR
- Barzahlung: 10,00 EUR
- Rückgeld: -1,53 EUR
- MwSt. A 7%: 0,55 EUR
- NETTO: 7,92 EUR
- UMSATZ: 8,47 EUR
Am unteren Rand der Rechnung steht ein Hinweis auf den Payback-Programm: "Für Ihren Einkauf von 9 Euro auf 9 Euro erhalten Sie rabattfähige Artikel. Halten Sie 4 PAYBACK 'P'."
Die Rechnung ist leicht gefaltet und hat eine blaue Unterschrift oben.
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Tesla Cybercab: The Self-Driving Disaster Show - YouTube
youtube.com/watch?v=Z1lq6Jv-Fm…
Ich mag seine Videos...
- 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
As Dem Establishment Backs Cuomo, Calls Grow for NYC Mayor Race to Be 'Referendum' on Party's Direction
As Dem Establishment Backs Cuomo, Calls Grow for NYC Mayor Race to Be 'Referendum' on Party's Direction
"Cuomo winning will not only legitimize the Islamophobia that has dominated this race... but would also prove that you really can just waltz in and buy an election," said one observer.julia-conley (Common Dreams)
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Borsa: l'Europa apre in calo dopo l'attacco Usa all'Iran - Notizie - Ansa.it
https://www.ansa.it/sito/notizie/economia/2025/06/23/-borsa-leuropa-apre-in-calo-dopo-lattacco-usa-alliran-_c732f1f8-dbe7-4e6d-89e8-1ffe1cade832.html?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Pubblicato su Economia @economia-AgenziaAnsa
Borsa: l'Europa apre in calo dopo l'attacco Usa all'Iran - Notizie - Ansa.it
Le Borse europee avviano in calo la prima seduta della settimana. Sui mercati pesa il clima di incertezza dopo l'attacco degli Stati Uniti all'Iran, e in vista della della risposta di Teheran. (ANSA)Agenzia ANSA
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George Dubya Trump Seeks Regime Change In Iran
Listen to a reading of this article (reading by Tim Foley):Caitlin Johnstone (Caitlin’s Newsletter)
This is another flower I used the UVIVF technique for, i.e. using an UVA flashlight.
Taken with Sony Alpha 6000, Samyang Macro 100mm, 4s, ISO 100
#photography #fotografie #macrophotography #makrofotografie #makro #macro #uvivf #uv #ultraviolet #ultraviolett #closeup #details #detail #outdoor #night #nightshoot #nightshot #germany #allgäu #nature #natur #прииода #plant #plantphotography #planze #pflanzenfotografie
Pubblico il link ad un 'flipbook' di una mini-sequenza che avevo già provato a postare qui. Sono alle prime armi con la digitalizzazione di contenuti di questo tipo e sto provando diverse piattaforme gratuite. Accetto consigli ;)
L'opera è nata come una serie di schizzi su un quaderno piccolo, ma ho deciso che quella sarebbe stata la sua forma definitiva.
#fantasmi #fumetti #umorismo #città #passato #storia #sketchbook #disegno #sketchbook #vignette
online.fliphtml5.com/tgxtp/kpa…
Fantasmi_urbani
Una serie di schizzi fatti a mano su un notebook piccolo. Ho deciso che quella sarebbe stata la forma definitiva dell'opera.online.fliphtml5.com
Tinariwen - Tassili (2011)
Dopo l’ennesimo ascolto di Emmaar, il parallelo con Tassili, ultimo lavoro uscito nel 2011, è inevitabile. Il gruppo maliano che ha fatto, e continua a far conoscere la cultura tuareg in giro per il mondo, con questo disco, non si discosta di molto dal suo predecessore. Due sono soprattutto gli elementi in comune: deserto e messaggio. Il primo è stato registrato nel deserto algerino, Emmar invece, in quello nord americano del Joshua tree. Il messaggio: la musica come strumento di ribellione... silvanobottaro.blog/2024/09/10…
Ascolta: album.link/i/671816602
Home – Identità DigitaleSono su: Mastodon.uno - Pixelfed - Feddit
Tinariwen — Emmaar (2014)
Dopo l’ennesimo ascolto di Emmaar, il parallelo con Tassili, ultimo lavoro uscito nel 2011, è inevitabile. Il gruppo maliano che ha fatto, e continua a far conoscere la cultura tuareg in giro…Silvano Bottaro Blog
No Kings, No Empires: Thomas Jefferson, Ho Chi Minh & Declarations of Independence
counterpunch.org/2025/06/23/no…
"“When in the Course of human events…” You remember those resounding words which are as memorable as “We the People…” The brothers who signed the USA’s founding document might have called it a “Manifesto.” After all, like many manifestos it expresses a political agenda. Instead, they called
No Kings, No Empires: Thomas Jefferson, Ho Chi Minh & Declarations of Independence - CounterPunch.org
“When in the Course of human events…” You remember those resounding words which are as memorable as “We the People…” The brothers who signed the USA'sJonah Raskin (CounterPunch.org)
[3/3] The Soft Machine (Simone Basso / William S. Burroughs)
Enomisossab, "Canti del Salmone"
track # 4
2025 (2022-2024)
No Auto-Tune!
#thesoftmachine #burroughs #subterralabel #mastomusic
youtube.com/watch?v=mQXMwJJVpD…
- 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
🚀 Το @ONLYOFFICE Docs 9.0 είναι εδώ!
Ανακαλύψτε την επανάσταση στην παραγωγικότητα! 🎯
✨ Τεχνητή Νοημοσύνη σε φύλλα & μακροεντολές
📂 Υποστήριξη .md & Visio
📊 Diagram Viewer – Χωρίς 3rd party apps!
🔍 OCR για PDF – Αυτόματη εξαγωγή κειμένου
💡 Γρήγορα, εύκολα, ισχυρά!
🔗 Διαβάστε περισσότερα: onlyoffice.com/blog/el/2025/06…
#ONLYOFFICE #Docs9 #AI #Productivity #Tech #Markdown #Collaboration #OfficeTools #DigitalTransformation
ONLYOFFICE Docs 9.0: AI, .md, dιαγράμματα | ONLYOFFICE Blog
Ανακαλύψτε το ONLYOFFICE Docs 9.0 με AI, υποστήριξη .md, προβολή διαγραμμάτων, PDF OCR και βελτιωμένη διεπαφή. Κατεβάστε τώρα για μεγιστοποίηση παραγωγικότητας!ONLYOFFICE Blog
Search for survivors after Russian drone and missile barrage hits Kyiv
https://www.aljazeera.com/gallery/2025/6/23/search-for-survivors-after-russian-drone-and-missile-barrage-hits-kyiv?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Europe News @europe-news-AlJazeera
Search for survivors after Russian drone and missile barrage hits Kyiv
Attack on Kyiv kills five and wounds others as rescue efforts continue.Al Jazeera
Today's "Lauren Ipsum"
Please consider joining my Patreon! Every dollar helps along the way. patreon.com/smallbug
View the website at lauren.smallbugstudio.com/
Subscribe to the comic at laurenipsum.substack.com
Lauren Ipsum | Charles Brubaker | Substack
Get the "Lauren Ipsum" comics emailed directly to you! Click to read Lauren Ipsum, by Charles Brubaker, a Substack publication with hundreds of subscribers.Lauren Ipsum
Nel terzo post un'anteprima.
Un nuovo studio su 183mila persone rivela che gli incubi frequenti triplicano il rischio di morte precoce e accelerano l'invecchiamento più di fumo e obesità. Il cervello non distingue sogno da realtà: ogni incubo scatena cortisolo che danneggia irreversibilmente le cellule. Per fortuna, però, si può guarire.
#incubi #sonno #futuroprossimo
futuroprossimo.it/2025/06/incu…
Incubi frequenti più pericolosi di fumo e obesità
Ricerca shock: gli incubi frequenti accorciano i telomeri e accelerano invecchiamento. 19 anni di dati non mentono mai.Gianluca Riccio (FuturoProssimo)
Mahmoud Khalil leads pro-Palestine rally in New York
https://www.aljazeera.com/video/newsfeed/2025/6/23/mahmoud-khalil-leads-pro-palestine-rally-in-new-york?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Middle East News @middle-east-news-AlJazeera
Mahmoud Khalil leads pro-Palestine rally in New York
Palestinian activist and former Columbia University student Mahmoud Khalil has led a rally in New York after his releaseAl Jazeera
non-arbitrary attachment of sounds to object shapes
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)- Was kiki, now bouba (34%, 9 votes)
- Was bouba, now kiki (23%, 6 votes)
- Kiki before and after (19%, 5 votes)
- Bouba before and after (23%, 6 votes)
pressenza.com/it/2025/06/quand…
The Book of the New Words Un progetto teatrale di also.known.as. Quando inizia davvero una guerra? È questa la domanda che muove The Book of the New Words, progetto teatrale a cura di Simone Corso e Jovana Malinarić che si…
Redazione Italia
Das Bild zeigt den Eingang zum Görlitzer Park in Berlin. Der Eingang ist von einem Metallzaun umgeben, der an zwei Säulen mit Backsteinen befestigt ist. Die Säulen sind mit Graffiti und Plakaten bedeckt, was auf eine gewisse Urbanität hinweist. In der Mitte des Zauns befindet sich ein Informationsschild mit einer Karte des Parks, auf der verschiedene Bereiche und Einrichtungen eingezeichnet sind. Das Schild trägt den Text "Görlitzer Park" und "Herzlich willkommen!". Rechts neben dem Schild ist ein Warnschild mit der Aufschrift "TARE7" zu sehen. Im Hintergrund sind Bäume und ein weiterer Weg zu erkennen. Der Text am unteren Rand des Bildes lautet: "Görlitzer Park: Warum der Bau des Zauns so teuer ist."
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Bombing Iran Is Part of the USA’s Repetition Compulsion for War War War
counterpunch.org/2025/06/23/bo…
"Twenty years ago, one day in June 2005, I talked with an Iranian man who was selling underwear at the Tehran Grand Bazaar. People all over the world want peace, he said, but governments won’t let them have it. I thought of that conversation on Saturday night after the U.S. government attacked nuclear sites in
New #blog post: Containerising and deploying #Calibre server to read an annotate #ebooks in a browser
I've got a book than I need to read and take notes on over the next few months, but I'm long out of the habit of being able to sit and read.
To maximise my opportunity to dip in and out, I wanted to make the book available on every device I have - allowing a few spare minutes to be used here and there
This post talks about using Calibre's content server to do that
bentasker.co.uk/posts/blog/gen…
Containerising Calibre-Server To Read And Annotate Ebooks Via Web Brow
Some might call it procrastinating, but I've a book that I need to read and will likely want to annotate. Unfortunately, I'm long out of the habit of being able to just sit and read, so I decided thatwww.bentasker.co.uk
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Nice touch, the X-Clacks-Overhead header!
I just came across your post, and if someone ever reads the comment, I want to add this: if someone wants to use the content server on the desktop Calibre and use both the content server and the desktop application to manage annotations and highlight, one needs to allow the user used to authenticate to access it.
(source: reddit.com/r/Calibre/comments/…)
Thank you in the name of the community for improving the information at the source.
Trump attends the NATO summit in The Hague. Cartoon for Trouw: trouw.nl/cartoons/tjeerd-royaa…
#NATOsummit #Trump #NATO
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🚀 Il Galaxy S27 Ultra segna la fine di un'era, scorri verso l'infinito tra innovazione e design all'avanguardia! #Samsung #NextGenTech
🔗 tomshw.it/smartphone/galaxy-s2…
Galaxy S27 Ultra segnerà la fine di un'era
Samsung potrebbe eliminare l'alloggiamento integrato per la S Pen nel Galaxy S27 Ultra secondo rumors provenienti dalla Cina.Luca Zaninello (Tom's Hardware)
Samsung Galaxy S26 avrà 16 GB di RAM su tutti i modelli
#AI #GalaxyS26 #Leak #RAM #s #Smartphone #TechNews #Tecnologia
ceotech.it/samsung-galaxy-s26-…
Samsung Galaxy S26 avrà 16 GB di RAM su tutti i modelli
Samsung porterà 16 GB di RAM su tutta la linea Galaxy S26, potenziando AI e multitasking per superare la concorrenza già dal primo trimestre 2026.CeoTech
LukaFLBernaudeau
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •like this
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Libb
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •We have people telling us the earth is flat. Them saying so doesn't make our good old planet any flatter ;)
I mean one can find excess absolutely anywhere, that doesn't demonstrate much imho.
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Kidplayer_666
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •like this
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F04118F
in reply to Kidplayer_666 • • •Yep, and then there's probably a good number of people who have no idea of threat modelling who just copy those actions to say they have "good privacy".
Tbh, I'm closer to the latter.
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Seleni
in reply to Kidplayer_666 • • •I mean, it can be a bit of an issue everywhere.
Hilariously this post was just above this one in my feed.
evujumenuk
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •As long as everyone is having fun, I see no problem.
If you're not having fun switching mail providers, researching Gecko forks, or being a part-time sysadmin for your Fairphone, you should probably stop doing those things.
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☂️-
in reply to evujumenuk • • •evujumenuk
in reply to ☂️- • • •I'd sure hope so! Many of the things that privacy nuts like us do are not efficient uses of one's time.
They might require constant vigilance. They might need recurring work for continued effectiveness. They might necessitate exposure to intrusive negative emotions ("what is Google doing this week?!").
If you're not having fun, focus on measures that you implement once and then never have to think about again.
For example, I wouldn't recommend GrapheneOS to a journalist in an authoritarian regime. It might be "more secure", but they have a job to do and can't keep dicking around with obscure pointer authentication settings or whatnot. They should just get a current iPhone, enable Lockdown Mode if its tradeoffs are acceptable to them, and continue doing their best job, which isn't "phone administration".
LARPing as Jason Bourne, or prepping for the Rokobasiliskocalypse, is a hobby. It's okay, I do it too. However, it's not approachable or understandable to people who don't share that hobby, or are not as alarmed at the general state of things as we are.
☂️-
in reply to evujumenuk • • •people are literally targeted by this system today. and i live in the third world, i'm ripe for the taking.
i'm glad this can be a hobby for some of you guys though.
evujumenuk
in reply to ☂️- • • •It kind of has to be, if you're trying to be persistent about the whole thing. It's easy to feel overwhelmed and burn out over all of the different threats we're trying to defend against. I don't see how you can keep at it for months or years if you feel no joy over it. But maybe being deathly, relentlessly afraid of the dangers around us is enough after all.
If you don't even like doing this stuff, wouldn't it be better to focus on measures that require little upkeep? This is what my example suggestion was getting at, something that's as close to set-and-forget as possible, while getting you 90% of the way there. (Depending on your threat model, sure. If yours says that the sky is falling if Tim Apple gets your iCloud data, it certainly doesn't apply.)
OhVenus_Baby
in reply to evujumenuk • • •Damn this take needs more love. You will get shouted down And downvoted to the lowest depths if you speak against anything that isn't graphene. I like the project, it has merit. It's far far from perfect in so many ways. I don't believe it's the white knight in shining armour we like to think it is. Good yes. Saving grace. Not by a long shot. It's got many fundamental flaws.
Be conscious of your needs, not obsessive. I think a lot of people are obsessive and I get it totally. But FOMO is powerful. Don't overwork your mind trying to be perfect that you never make moves. Life isn't static. If your uneducated enough to truly need the utmost best tech stacks with no real knowledge on how to implement and deploy. You likely don't need to be doing the shit your thinking of, or currently doing.
INeedMana
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •like this
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southsamurai
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •like this
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Maeve
in reply to southsamurai • • •CameronDev
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •Yes, some people absolutely take things way too far, and often unproductively.
Like the person who was trying to disable websockets. Or the people who will shun signal, but jump directly on the flavour of the month signal clone, which might be completely backdoored.
If you dont know what you are doing, randomly turning things on and off at best does nothing, at worst makes you even more signaturable/trackable.
Its good to educate yourself on various protections, but unfortunately, it requires a lot of careful research and understanding.
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Jason2357
in reply to CameronDev • • •CameronDev
in reply to Jason2357 • • •I have no issue with tinkering, my issue is more when tinkering gets turned around into advice.
I think I would be happier if these communities/subreddits were a bit more explicit about "We are amateurs, for actual advice, go to X, Y, Z".
Jason2357
in reply to CameronDev • • •RvTV95XBeo
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •Of course some people go too far. I think a lot of folks on here grossly overestimate / overstate their threat model, but I think the discussions are good for the limited few who really do need to cover their asses.
Me personally, I hate the idea of companies bidding for my attention without my consent, so I try and make it as hard as possible for them to get it. This just so happens to overlap nicely with the goals of the privacy community much of the time.
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Auli
in reply to RvTV95XBeo • • •hansolo
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •Most people have absolutely zero idea how much data they put out there, what's done with it, and why any rational person would be horrified if they knew the extent to which individuals were tracked. Simply put, short of showing them how their lives are made worse, they don't care, and can't be made to care.
For friends and family, you can do things like give them books or send articles explaining it slowly in parts. For everyone else, just ask them if they know how Google tracks what they do in Incognito windows and see what they say. If they say that Google can't or doesn't, they might as well say the Earth is flat. You can't argue with that, even though it's provably false.
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Jason2357
in reply to hansolo • • •As evidence, I've heard people talk about worrying their phone is listening to their conversations. It's not that they don't care about privacy, it's that they don't even know what's possible. With all the data collection that is happening, the data brokers are already selling a dataset predicting that you are going to be shopping for new baby items and what types of manipulative tactics are likely to work on you well before you talk to your friend about it.
hansolo
in reply to Jason2357 • • •FlappyBubble
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •I definetly take things too far in terms of my effort vs my current threat model. But there are many aspects of trying to increase privacy.
For one, I'm very interested in the philosophy, ethics and politics of privacy and adjacent fields such as security. Part of what I do is just learning.
Also I try to be a good role model to my AFK peers and family. Of course I don't try to get everyone to adopt my hobby. But as in every field it's hard to teach even the basic stuff to others without deeper understanding of the field.
N0x0n
in reply to FlappyBubble • • •That's so true, but even more true in IT... It changes so rapidly and things don't stay the same over time... It's not like a degree in Biology where things you learn stay relatively the same !
IT is 5 inches deep but miles long ! (Something like that!)
burgerchurgarr
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •Definitely yeah! If you’re just a regular person living in a fairly democratic country and you’re thinking about physically clogging your usb ports to avoid someone breaking in your room and tampering your device while you’re exploring Barcelona, or if you consider removing camera and microphone from your pixel phone that you use every day, you’re probably taking it too far.
OTOH I’m still having trouble getting people away from Meta apps and I think it’s absolutely crazy how little thought people put into the amount of data that Meta collects.
TBH even in many dictatorships you’re mostly fine just using a VPN and fake accounts if you have government critical opinions. But that’s just my personal experience. Goes without saying if you have a decent follower count or are some kind of journalist you should be very paranoid.
Anyway, the point is, it’s probably good to feel slightly paranoid because most people aren’t paranoid enough, but most of us are also not Edward Snowden or Saudi journalists, so there should be a balance between practicality and privacy.
DeuxChevaux
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •Once, someone sent me an Amazon link for baby nappies, and fool me clicked on it. Now Amazon showed boomer me baby nappies suggestions for the next six months. AI at its best... These things annoy me, so I try to avoid being tracked whenever reasonably possible.
OTOH, I am old and hope to not live long enough to experience any rogue government or whatever else persecuting me for having clicked on a baby nappies link years ago; so my threat model is short term only. I keep my privacy to a level, where it hopefully prevents as many annoyances as possible, but does not hamper what I am doing online too much. If I was younger, I'd likely do more.
glitching
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •I'm like a test-bed for a) my business customers and b) friends and family. also, "wasting" time thusly is vastly better than my previous "hobby", namely buying new and exciting shit.
my customers benefit from me knowing how exactly (and why!) I should implement e.g. an unbound instance on-premise. or an in-house prosody communication platform. or the "dev team" (buncha dudes poking at wordpress) getting a slew of used elitebooks with linux for the price of one new windows-with-ai yoga the spec initially called for.
f&f benefit from my early adoption by way of trickle-down tech. no way is anyone of them going to selfhost all this crap, but they get sprinkles of benefits in the form of "get this phone with that OS with those apps" and they're dramatically better off. you don't need the new ideapad ryzen that's "on sale" (isn't), have this 10-year old macbook I fixed and installed linux on - off you go. you don't need the new phone that's "free" with an exorbitantly priced plan, have the cheapest plan with this Redmi/Poco phone I swapped the battery on and installed LineageOS.
as to practical considerations, any and all interactions with the likes of FAANG are and should be adversarial from the get-go, they are out to hurt you by any means necessary. them fucks lost the benefit of doubt ages ago so you not letting them have a millimeter of grasp in your domicile should be your primary task. as their gains are cumulative in nature, every battle won is significant and you'd do well to remind yourself constantly of that.
quediuspayu
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •Yes and I see two reasonable reasons for that.
One is that, like in most communities, those that feel more compelled to post and comment are those that are more passionate about the topic and/or have more extreme views.
The other reason is that given the sensitive nature of the topic, without knowing the threat level of the reader I can see how one would be reluctant to go for the "good enough".
TXL
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •I think that "mental illness" kind of comments would come from people whose attitude for safety in many aspects of life is "that's never going to happen (to me)". Those people exist, so sooner or later you'll see comments like that.
On the other hand everybody is trying to find a balance in convenience and safety and the situations and environments and life on general for one person can be quite different from that of some others'. So what's adequate for one won't be for another.
It's like PPE or personal finance or many other things. There's no one size that fits all and finding the right fit isn't easy. For a lot of us it's work in progress. Sometimes you know what's definitely needed and tweak the details. Sometimes you know something is not going well and needs to change.
Maybe it's enough to say that it's complicated and have some compassion and support for people that think it isn't. Or people that think it's all too much to handle.
Cherry
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •Yeh my family treat me like I am a nut job. I only swapped away from google and ask them to think about the orgs they spend their money on for example Amazon.
It’s amazing how many people got on board with Covid conspiracies but questioning where you data goes, who’s using it, what for, no that’s a bit far lol.
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OhVenus_Baby
in reply to Cherry • • •Told my older parents I use a custom ROM with a profile for work and a profile for personal and they asked me what I'm hiding, and why I'm so paranoid. I said.. it's not paranoia, it's organization. Color coding profiles allows my mind to switch gears from work to personal life like mental compartments. I am a boring person. I have nothing to be paranoid about. They didn't believe me. Oh well....
Edit: part of me thinks the whole mental state switching from work profile to personal is an ADHD aspect as well. Especially the color coding helps wonders.
WQMann
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •explainxkcd.com/wiki/index.php…
Relevant XKCD;
I feel that it is closer to the fact that the communities forgot most beginners are completely new to this in general. They might not even know what exactly a 'browser' is, much less cookies and stuff.
Hence when we try to spoonfeed them information, it comes off as overwhelming and forced.
Agree that there are some extremist, but they mostly act in good faith tbh.
Another thing I noticed is there are more preachers of 'how' than 'why'. Having a beginner go down the route of privacy without giving them a purpose to do so is quite off-putting.
2501: Average Familiarity - explain xkcd
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utopiah
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •upstroke4448
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •CosmicTurtle0
in reply to upstroke4448 • • •There is a point of diminishing returns. Like most things, you have to evaluate what you are willing to live with and let go.
I know someone who only browses incognito because they don't want cookies tracking them. They log into everything every day. Which, imo, is worse because those cookies are still tracking you but you now have to log in everyday.
But for them they like the control.
I've moved most of my incidental link on my phone clicking to Firefox Focus (thanks to URL Checker) which has upped my privacy. I wouldn't have made that change without the prompt that URL Checker provides though.
I use a VPN outside of my house and I use pihole at home. I am tempted to switch my DNS to unbound but the juice doesn't seem to be worth the squeeze. We'll see the next time I need to rebuild my pi.
evujumenuk
in reply to CosmicTurtle0 • • •I used to run unbound on my laptop just so I could configure stuff like forwarding zones with more precision than what a stub resolver normally gives you.
It can also be your validating DNSSEC resolver, which also satisfied that sort of morbid curiosity in me.
In the age of DoT and DoH, with endpoints hardcoded in browser binaries, that sort of thing has a lot less punch than it used to. Even back then Go binaries would start ignoring your
nsswitch.conf
…CosmicTurtle0
in reply to evujumenuk • • •DNSSEC always causes errors on my pihole set up and end up disabling it. The upstream is DoH though (via dnscrypt) so it's technically DNSSEC but without the clients seeing the authentication. That's enough for me.
At some point, I fully expect apps and websites to begin resolving DNS directly instead of relying on the OS to provide resolution services. At that point our options will be to wholesale block IP addresses at the router.
AnotherUsername
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •A year ago: yes.
Today: nope.
PowerCrazy
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •Like most things on the internet it's a game of one-upsmanship. User X uses Firefox with Incognito. User Y say's that isn't good enough for his own inconsistent definition of "good enough."
So User-Y suggests Firefox with 14 different add-ons and only browse through an immutable VM.
But then user-z comes along and says that if you are using windows at all, you don't really care about privacy, so you should be using Icefox on some obscure fork of ubuntu through an immutable VM, with a pi-hole.
Then user-w says well if you aren't using a VPN none of this matters, so Obviously you need to rent an Alibaba cloud server hosted in China, that you only connect to through a privacy respecting VPN, and then you only browse through TOR.
And so on. By the time a user is asking about how to stop google ads, the only "serious" answer by the community involves using Packet over Ham-radio -> and spending thousands of dollars a month on 4 different cloud providers, rented through several shell companies set up in Switzerland, the Cayman Islands and China, while only typing in Esperanto using an ASCII-only font.
ScoffingLizard
in reply to PowerCrazy • • •zod000
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •pinball_wizard
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •A few weeks ago, I would have said 100%. I am needlessly careful.
I know I'm protecting against privacy threats that are technically possible, but unlikely. Preventing the tracking is just an interesting hobby, to me.
But earlier this month, we learned that Meta went "all-in" on what I consider some fucked up shit - running a mini localhost server to track the vanishingly few people who bother to block their tracking.
So now I guess I'm only about 30% sure I'm being needlessly careful.
like this
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relic4322
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •I have been thinking about this a lot recently. I live a life where OPSEC is relevant. Its something that I have had to consider always, and has been for 2 decades. Even so, I wasn't as concerned this whole time as I am these days. The fact is that technology is making it such that its no longer "im not a person of interest they wont spend resources on me" because data crunching is happening to such an extreme, on such a grand scale, that person of interest doesn't even matter. Do you exist, yes. Do you have a digital foot print, yes you do. Even if you dont do a lot online. Your metrics are being captured and being inferenced, and systems are using predictive analysis to determine what you "may" do in a given situation. Depending on who controls those systems they may decide not to give you a chance to make that choice.
Ill I can say is that there are a large number of groups that want your data, for a lot of different reasons, and none of them are for your benefit. So, are you going to let them have it, or are you going to take steps to reign in the amount of info you leave about?
Zerush
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •Zoma
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •The amount of times I've been told the nothing to hide argument is stupid.
QuoVadisHomines
in reply to Zoma • • •HiddenLayer555
in reply to Zoma • • •SpacetimeMachine
in reply to HiddenLayer555 • • •electric_nan
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •Krudler
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •Yes.
Like any interest, people get so far removed from the original point, it becomes about something new.
Like cast iron. People go from not really knowing about it to learning how to cook with it, to learning how to do basic maintenance. About 20% of people go completely off the rails, and they start buffing and polishing them like they are fabergé eggs, and joining cast iron groups.
Privacy is the same. Learn the basics, follow the basics, relax and get over yourself.
ScoffingLizard
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •rumba
in reply to DeathByBigSad • • •Many times throughout my life, what would seem like a reasonably easy question to answer has changed dramatically.
30 years ago you could look at data collection and go there's no way that they could store a meaningful amount of data about everyone.
20 years ago you could look at data collection and go there's no way they could have the contents of every phone call It's just targeted it's not a big deal
We are the point now, where everything you ever wrote or said could be thrown into a model with such unimaginable levels of lossy compression that they could simply ask it if you are the kind of person who is into whatever the future administration deems as unacceptable and deny you access to things. All you need is a fascist regime or a dictatorship installed and all of a sudden anything you ever did can be used as grounds to lock you up.
On a governmental budget it wouldn't even be that expensive and we're just at the beginning of this.
We have seen that governments can change quickly, We know the data collection is affordable and can be permanent.
Certainly some people privacy-minded to the point of compulsion. But I can't say that anyone is wrong to seek extreme levels of privacy based on trends and capabilities.
They leave your cell phone at home and make sure somebody opens your apps and uses them people aren't anywhere near as crazy as they used to sound