fosstulate

joined 2 years ago

PMing you shortly

Vendors will use passkey implementations as vectors for lock-in. Guaranteed. Workplaces need to accept BYO.

[–] fosstulate@iusearchlinux.fyi 64 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (11 children)

The elephant in the room is that parental controls development is a total wasteland, and has been for years. There's no money in it. FAMAG is actively hostile to it and phone OEMs haven't got a dog in the race and already contend with razor-thin margins. It's one dimension of a broader political problem of digitization that smarter legislators and politicians have surely noticed by now, which is that unlike human beings, users increasingly don't have any rights or agency worth a damn, and are treated with contempt.

I like that a grassroots movement has remembered that parenting should be at the heart of children's technology access, but I fear such groups' 'useful idiot' value to authoritarian elements up to the same old tricks.

[–] fosstulate@iusearchlinux.fyi -5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

THEY KNOW

SHUT IT DOWN

This write-up articulates the issues from the perspective of a security lecturer. The core issue really is ownership of technology.

https://techrights.org/o/2021/11/29/teaching-cybersecurity/

Whatever the appearance of competition between, say, Apple and Facebook, Big-Tech companies collude to maintain interlocking systems of controls that enforce each others shared values including sabotage of interoperability, security and inviting regulation upon themselves to better keep down smaller competitors. Big-Tech comes with its own value system that it imposes on our culture.

[–] fosstulate@iusearchlinux.fyi 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Sean, are you a risktaker by nature?

Oh yes. I once read a pop-up picture story book about giraffes.

The threats are what keep us alert, circumspect and fleet-footed in our use of web technology. Always have done.

[–] fosstulate@iusearchlinux.fyi 7 points 2 years ago (1 children)

I want to view multiple tabs at once, in a split-page view where I can scroll on one tab, then mouse-over to another and start independently scrolling on that one. It's probably the key feature I miss from Vivaldi. Is there some insurmountable obstacle in the engine that prevents implementation, or is it stubborn devs?

[–] fosstulate@iusearchlinux.fyi 1 points 2 years ago

Getting people to attach a(ny) value to it is the biggest hurdle by far. I think the complacent attitude is part genuine incapacity in dealing with abstraction (what is a data profile anyway? How is knowledge of my purchase history a risk to me?) and part exceptionalism/denial. People like this tend never to think in terms of power dynamics.

[–] fosstulate@iusearchlinux.fyi 7 points 2 years ago

Grocery shopping is best done at small privately owned businesses. Small supermarkets in particular are and should be treasured by local communities. Something about their ownership structure and their lack of scale makes them more accountable to shoppers. They can't afford to engage in the data wrangling red and green do to work out the maximum price the market will pay for tuna on Thursdays between 6 to 7pm. The fresh produce is often better quality, the PA music less insipid (or absent totally, hooray for Aldi), the stock actually looks a bit different quarter to quarter. It's simply a better balance of power between org and individual.

If you're shopping at large corporate retailers, especially when making vice purchases, you're best using protection

[–] fosstulate@iusearchlinux.fyi 6 points 2 years ago

Simple solution. Kensington lock attached to the gonads. The device can helpfully warn others against theft with an LED projection on the wearer saying Big Cojone Security is active.

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