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pmlnr

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pmlnr
·mese scorso·discuss
Claude Eulogy - the dreadful, dreary pondering that inescapably descends on all under heaven.
pmlnr
·3 mesi fa·discuss
The same social media that stores everything down to your keystrokes? Sure, the problem is needing a gov ID, sure.
pmlnr
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Nginx has per server, per path limiting options.
pmlnr
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Because the internet became a shithole.
pmlnr
·3 mesi fa·discuss
A phone, no. An internet connected device is another question.

One can always get a dumbphone without this.
pmlnr
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Been there recently. Rate limit on nginx and anti-syn flood on pf solved it.
pmlnr
·6 mesi fa·discuss
> Can I install my banking apps?

Choose a bank with viable web banking.

> Is there a Google pay equivalent?

It's called a debit/credit card.
pmlnr
·7 mesi fa·discuss
XMPP can do everything you listed at a fraction of the resources. It'll also need stub/turn, like everything else for video and voice, but it works.
pmlnr
·7 mesi fa·discuss
And it's the best widely available, accessible, battle hardened, omnipresent messasing system.
pmlnr
·7 mesi fa·discuss
Email itself is federated. Sort of the original federated messaging.
pmlnr
·7 mesi fa·discuss
Web 2.0 slop, das good shit.
pmlnr
·7 mesi fa·discuss
So many thoughts on this...

The platforms and their convenience that one "only" has to write the post yet the internet needs so much metadata, so it tried to autogenerate it, instead of asking for it. People are put off by need to write a bloody subject for an email already, imagine if they were shown what's actually the "content" is.

About convincing: get the few that matters on deltachat, so they don't need anything new or extra - it's just email on steroids.

As for Mastodon: it's still someone else's system, there's nothing stopping them from adding AI metadata either on those nodes.
pmlnr
·8 mesi fa·discuss
There are things out there which are running from a bare metal host, without relying on someone else's computer (aka the cloud). HN is one of them.
pmlnr
·8 mesi fa·discuss
It is, unless it's absolutely strictly local only to your devices.

It WILL be turned against you at one point, may it be a decline of insurance in the US, political imprisonment on visiting a non-democratic system, and so on.
pmlnr
·9 mesi fa·discuss
Imagine if we printed the capabilities on the cables, like we used to.
pmlnr
·9 mesi fa·discuss
There's 0% chance the stuff fits in 9L when the winter things are included. Where do they go during summer?
pmlnr
·11 mesi fa·discuss
Android doesn't come with system wide socks proxy support, and i couldn't find an open source app for it either. Is anyone aware of one?

Nonetheless this is a surprisingly simple and bullet proof solution: SSH, that's not vpn boss, i need it for work.
pmlnr
·11 mesi fa·discuss
"Scientists in 2025 discover why rave is called rave"
pmlnr
·11 mesi fa·discuss
I don't remember the link to the essay that defined public, private, and secret information. Essentially it said that public is ok for anyone to hear, private is something that shouldn't concern others, whereas secret is something that needs to be kept under wraps.

Under these terms most of what we're protecting with encryption is private - finances, health records, etc. I shouldn't concern others.

Sadly, it does, because the world is full of pieces of shite people who want dynamic pricing on health insurance based on medical information, and all the similar reasons, for example. (Note: I'm from Europe. The while insurance system that's in place in the UK is disgusting, and it's nowhere even remotely close to the pestilence of the US system.)

I'm conflicted with the whole encryption topic. We initially needed CPU power for it, now we have hardware, but that means more complicated hardware, and so on. We now have 47 days long certificates because SeKuRiTy, and a system that must be running, otherwise a mere text website will be de-ranked by Google and give you a fat *ss warning about not being secure. But again, we "need" it, because ISPs were caught adding ads to plain text data.

Unless there are serious repercussions on genuinely crappy people, encryption must stay. So the question is: why is nobody thinking about strong, enforceable laws about wiretapping, altering content, stealing information that people shouldn't have, etc, before trying to backdoor encryption?
pmlnr
·11 mesi fa·discuss
> The UK is politically,

Europe generally has constitutions, and not precedence laws, which is a massive difference.

> culturally

Debatable. As a Hungarian, living in the UK.

> and geographically close to Europe

This one is true.