Deshittification

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State of affairs for technology seem bad? But what is being done to change it? And what could be done by you so it changes at least for yourself?

A community to talk about the reversal of enshittification, be it news, actions that could be done, etc.

A person that sees no solution has no reason to keep going.

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People act in the limits of consequence, and the same goes for companies and their products and services. Accountability helps making the limits clearer and narrower.

Some times, sites appear hoping to help consumers in such regard, like Reclame Aqui, an old Brazilian review site that grew into being an alternative support medium, companies hating having a poor ratio of resolved issues there, and Consumer Rights Wiki, seeking to document cases of consumer exploitation. The former already having a positive effect, and the latter that though I haven't seen tangible effects, could have too.

But it leads me to think, are there other such cases that have already had positive effects, or that could have, be them regional or otherwise?

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DRM allegedly is meant to stop distribution of unlicensed copies. Quite novel. However, from what I can observe, usually they seem easy to remove or circumvent, and its main use seems to be to stop legitimate users from using a given product.

For things like music, games and movies, as a response to this, I see hints of interest of going back to physical medias, as back when this type of media was mainstream, DRM, if present, was usually a local nuisance, and not a remote killswitch.

Besides being able to own the physical media, including being able to back them up (including scanning for books and the sort), the experience of using them can be quite nice too.

But something I don't spot quite as frequently is mentions of DRM-free medias distributed purely digitally. And if one is to "vote with the wallet" to try to push for better market practices, or even for ease of backing up or accessibility, I'd propose recommending those too.

Physical media is expensive to ship, harder to store, you can't carry around a rental store-worth of physical medias in your backpack, and due to distribution bottlenecks and licenses, the company can't produce as many copies, making it less accessible. And from what I can observe, people usually prefer contents to be easier to access, adding to the problem.

With digital, those things are dealt with, at worse requiring the user to double-click some file. And if/as DRM-free gets more trending, lack of killswitches starts to be normalized again among those that usually prefer the double-click.

So going back to the point, while there's value in physical medias, I think digital DRM-free may be better to promote, be it by purchasing or recommending, to try to push the market in a better direction.

What do you think?

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Posting because I figure it could help you move away from enshittified things that used to be one-time payment but are now ongoing-subscription-only access. Or maybe that is technically a different issue, but I think still adjacent enough that posting helpful alternatives would be nice.

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A small site, with a list of existing projects meant to help people disenshittify and some suggestions of projects to take on to help people do that.

Found this before the community was founded and kept the tab open, so glad I've got somewhere to put it.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.cafe/post/28583067

LibreWolf is one of the best browsers for people who don't like generative AI.

Here is the statement posted on Mastodon:

As there seems to have been recent confusion about this, just a quick "official" toot to then pin: we haven't and won't support "generative AI" related stuff in LibreWolf. If you see some features like that (like Perplexity search recently, or the link preview feature now) it is solely because it "slipped through". As soon as we become aware of something like this / it gets reported to us, we will remove/disable it ASAP.

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Nintendo isn't the most pro-consumer rights company out there, to say it lightly.

But even they managed to change for better previously, which came after a gradual relaxation from even more draconian policies, as registered here and here, and that as far as I know, the changes remain to this day.

If even a company as Nintendo can be willing to change, who's to say what can or can't be achieved. =)

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Alternative upload (Youtube): directly | PreserveTube | Invidious