OneMeaningManyNames
Full time smug prick
- 23 Posts
- 232 Comments
OneMeaningManyNames@lemmy.mlto Memes@lemmy.ml•The brittleness of white billionairesEnglish71·2 months agoPeople playing fast and loose with the terms “discrimination” and “racism” really grind my gears. We are talking about centuries of fucking crimes against humanity, and some sad little fuckers have the nerve to conflate reparations with the very crimes that were committed.
OneMeaningManyNames@lemmy.mltoToday I learned@lemmy.ml•TIL ska originated in the 1950s and is the precursor to reggaeEnglish4·2 months agoAh, I get you. I myself thought the HXC logo with the X in a circle (which stands for hardcore) was Cyrillic for “sound”, or someone simply told me and I believed them.
OneMeaningManyNames@lemmy.mltoToday I learned@lemmy.ml•TIL ska originated in the 1950s and is the precursor to reggaeEnglish8·2 months agoThis is correct, but there was a revival in the UK in the 1980’s. It was the latter that influenced the ska-punk genre.
We aren’t special.
You should dial this statement way up. The population of Lemmy is definitely not a representative demographic. Nor is Reddit’s.
OneMeaningManyNames@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Why does Big Tech's "End to End" encryption matter if they are compromised anyways?English10·2 months agoThere is a conceptual distinction: Encryption in transit vs. encryption at rest. You may send the packets encrypted to the server, but if they are not encrypted on the server’s file system, anyone can read them.
The real question is, why do you think governments make such a big fuss about citizens having access to military grade encryption?
There have been audits of e2ee implementations, and the algorithms used also have some objective properties. I don’t think that I have ever heard in cryptography discussions that backdoors are so widespread that the discussion is moot. I have only heard, time and time again, the opposite.
Even Apple, in this very occasion, opted to ditch the service rather than backdoor it, and in fact takes the UK to court over this. I think that the opinion that this is all for show is a tad wild, and not very well supported in this occasion.
Like every cryptology book starts with the adage “There is cryptography that prevents your little sister from reading your mail, and cryptography that prevents the government from reading your mail, and we will talk about the latter.”
On the other hand, not all implementations are created equal. Telegram was recently under fire, and there is a lot of variance in e2ee implementations in XMPP clients, IIRC.
OneMeaningManyNames@lemmy.mlOPto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Mozilla drops new Privacy Note and Terms of Service; People are saying it is Bad NewsEnglish1·2 months agoOK now that arstechnica has written about it, shills might stop nagging in the comments about my titling. LMAO
OneMeaningManyNames@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•What does a threat model look like?English2·2 months agoThe basic way to do this is you respond to these three questions: What am I trying to protect? From whom? What are they able to do to get there?
OneMeaningManyNames@lemmy.mlto Fediverse@lemmy.ml•Funkwhale Wants to Filter Out Far-Right MusicEnglish5·2 months agoNo shit. They are not the same thing, they are heavily overlapping adjacent sets of people. You draw the line at alt-right, you are left with less than 20% of Republican voters, but a 100% of MAGA hat-bearers. This distinction is more theoretical than practical.
OneMeaningManyNames@lemmy.mlto Fediverse@lemmy.ml•Funkwhale Wants to Filter Out Far-Right MusicEnglish3·2 months agoIt is one of these cases where that “OR” approaches a singular circle.
OneMeaningManyNames@lemmy.mlOPto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Mozilla drops new Privacy Note and Terms of Service; People are saying it is Bad NewsEnglish1·2 months agoNote just to be sure, Mull is a different thing than Mullvad. What you wrote makes sense for Mullvad, but I am not so sure if this is the case with Mull, the mobile app.
OneMeaningManyNames@lemmy.mlOPto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Mozilla drops new Privacy Note and Terms of Service; People are saying it is Bad NewsEnglish7·2 months agoI don’t think we understand very well the threat model here. Are we talking about having a Mozilla account or the web engine itself. If you have an account they will probably start doing mining shit with it. What about activists researching certain topics then? The content browsed can be visible to Mozilla if they use their account for syncing bookmarks. That should be a dealbreaker right there. No different than Meta user-profiling the fuck out of your engagement behaviors. Now if this is NOT the case and you haven’t a Mozilla account, I assume that the version of the web engine available back at the time of the fork is exactly the same. So far so good.
The problem is that browsers are hard, and there is a ton of web protocols to be implemented, various fixes for security, support extensions and other QOL features. WORD ON THE STREET is that tasks like these cannot be undertaken as solo/hobby projects, that funding and an organization structure is essential. The teams behind LibreWolf, Waterfox, etc have a track record of already lagging behind Firefox’s version updates. Same goes with user-profile and configuration sets like Arkenfox (if I am not wrong). You may tweak the conf all you want, but if privacy and anonymity is compromised at the web engine level, these forks will be left with little to do about it. Then the only option will be to keep using an old version of the web engine (sacrificing security and quality of life extensions), or ditching the gecko web engine altogether.
That is why people are looking for genuine alternatives to the web engine.
OneMeaningManyNames@lemmy.mlOPto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Mozilla drops new Privacy Note and Terms of Service; People are saying it is Bad NewsEnglish1·2 months agoI thought Mullvad was the best in anti-fingerprinting. Anyone can check their own configuration with EFF’s “cover your tracks” site.
OneMeaningManyNames@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•DHS quietly eliminates ban on surveillance based on sexual orientation and gender identityEnglish5·2 months agoPerhaps this explains why all these spook impostors are so vehemently against advanced privacy and anonymity. They are signaling they are the good ones!
OneMeaningManyNames@lemmy.mlOPto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Mozilla drops new Privacy Note and Terms of Service; People are saying it is Bad NewsEnglish421·2 months agoYou write a wall if text thinking you will shift the views of disgusted people turning their back to the product, a product at that which was iconic for their open source culture, and yet it somehow managed to alienate the niche that was more favorable to it. Good luck with that!
OneMeaningManyNames@lemmy.mlOPto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Mozilla drops new Privacy Note and Terms of Service; People are saying it is Bad NewsEnglish625·2 months agoThis is trolling. It is beyond self-evident that the Open Source fediverse has thoroughly criticized the latest Mozilla move. I myself point out device fingerprinting and third party vendors. You respond to neither approach. You want me to do homework and quantify the sentiment on the trending Mozillla hashtag? Sealioning. Diigressing the topic of conversation? Report and block you sad impotent spook troll.
Criticizes gatekeeping of science by showcasing it shares the premise of the very laws that were used in 1934 to bar Jewish people from citizenship in Germany. The table used for the adaptation is from Wikipedia, a summary and breakdown of an actual 1930’s poster explaining the new rules to Germans.