Ashelyn

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

The lines coming from the label nodes add a lot of unnecessary visual noise. I think it's already pretty clear what's what based on the circles this graph is arranged into.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Wouldn't that be nice!

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I wonder if Fedora would have a toolchain for networked credential management, with its connection to RedHat and everything

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 month ago

Bro really called "just a guy shooting terrorists" apolitical

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Imo their issue was in not forming a broader union coalition before picking their workplace

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 months ago

Alcohol is also a known carcinogen and cause of numerous health issues. Probably worse than the aspartame

Plus all the extra sodium will give you kidney stones

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Perhaps they are bad examples, but my point was more that I think those ecosystems thrive in spite of the company that owns the upstream at this point more than because of it. They did tremendously useful work getting the projects off the ground but it ostensibly seems like they get in the way more often than not; that said, I haven't done any open source work on either of the two. I'd be interested to hear your take, I could be pretty far off the mark.

Honestly my main examples I'd point to right now are situations like manifest V3 and Android nitpicks like the recent Bluetooth 2-tap change; don't get me wrong, they are easy to fork and have thriving ecosystems in terms of volunteer dedication, but those forks still primarily targeted towards technical users (with some exceptions) and companies selling devices like the Freedom Phone (and other, actually neat, useful, properly privacy focused devices which is awesome!). By far, however, most users are on the upstream branch due to "default choice" psychology and have to deal with the bullshit that's increasingly integrated into the proprietary elements that Google seems to be making harder and harder to separate from the open source ones. I suppose that's why education and getting the word out are all the more important though.

Could be the sensationalist end of the tech news cycle getting me spun up on an overall inaccurate view of things.

There is also the point I have to raise that security update support is always a very valuable asset that can be worth dealing with some downsides to get ahold of. I'm hoping a lot of those can be pulled into open source projects on more of a piecemeal basis where applicable?

I'd be happy to be proven wrong about my rudimentary assessment. I have enough things to be doomer about and honestly it would be nice to have one or two fewer!

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (3 children)

Chromium is still open source, as is Android to some extent. I get that the two companies (Google and Proton) are in completely different size classes, but something being open source doesn't necessarily mean it stays healthy. Sure people can fork it, but the issue tends to lie in continuous maintenance by volunteers against continuous maintenance by a large company that's constantly adding in anti-features along with desired ones.

I'm not necessarily saying Proton will go down that route, but trying to become big and bundled as a value proposition opens the door for that behavior once they get enough people locked into the ecosystem.

[–] [email protected] 45 points 2 months ago (7 children)

A "privacy" company acquiring and centralizing various projects to be under its umbrella seems kind of worrisome to me even if it's done with pure intentions.

 

I use Firefox whenever I can.

On first install of the browser I usually end up following a hardening guide which includes stuff like blocking cross site cookies, setting a few things in about:config to disable Pocket/etc, and installing uBlock Origin. I've taken what I consider a relatively balanced approach, I don't use anything like noScript, uMatrix, etc that ultimately just cost a lot of time fiddling to get the 10th website of the week working.

I've been more or less fine browsing the web this way for years, but around the start of 2024 I've started seeing way more "Access Denied" pages than I used to. I think part of it is Cloudflare or similar, but I don't know exactly what's changed or what's triggering it to occur.

It usually goes away and I can re access the site in 10-30 minutes as usual, but I've had it occur in really weird instances, such as trying to change my Minecraft skin and getting blocked by the website. The server block often goes away immediately if I switch my user agent, so I know that it has something to do with how I've got everything set up.

Not sure what anyone else's experience with this has been. I'd like to hear some of your thoughts and tips

[–] [email protected] 2 points 9 months ago (3 children)

I mean that thing where he said to stop eating any/all spicy food and eat plain yogurt if you have anger issues seemed a little weird. Like can offer some plausible deniability but it seems like the notion comes more from "traditional medicine" and iirc there's not much research on the subject. One of his chatters challenged him on it and he basically told them that maybe some of the ancient wisdom actually has a point, the science just hasn't caught up yet, trust him on this one. I don't disagree with the sentiment in general, science won't always have the answer to a specific question, but I do get weary when people use try to use that to offer their specific remedies.