rageAgainstCages

joined 2 months ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] rageAgainstCages@crazypeople.online 1 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

I appreciate the tip. It was alienating at first but after some fiddling it seems like a good option. My findings--

Pros

  • It’s able to save a page as a single file which can be opened in both Firefox and Chromium browsers (rare!)
  • It’s able to faithfully save a Github issue page that correctly renders when re-opened. (All other tools fail on a GH issue)
  • The URL is embedded on the 3rd line of the file (rare.. no other tool does this)

Cons

  • No control over where it saves the file
  • Forced GUI, no commandline (though I’m not sure if it can be hacked to run automatically in a headless Firefox or something)
  • No icon appears in the plugin tray. And cannot be added using the Firefox custom toolbar tool.
  • Default keystroke is control-shift-y (which clashes with the stock keystroke for reaching about:downloads)
  • There is no menu item for it

I was only able to get it to work by re-assigning a custom keystroke which I will forget and have to visit the addon manager to recall.

 

If I save a page to a local HTML file, I do not see where the URL of the page itself is saved. There is no comment or anything at the top that contains the URL. So I have to either add a comment manually myself or make a note of it somewhere, or bookmark it.

Is there a smarter way of working? Can the URL be derived or fished out of the saved file, or is there any feature that saves the URL as well?

 

cross-posted from !humanrights@crazypeople.online - https://crazypeople.online/post/5464740

FATCA specifically oppresses Americans who live outside the US. It strong-arms banks into treating Americans adversely different based on their national origin (ranging from denial of service to extra data collection and disclosure). I thought Americans were the only people who broadly face discrimination in banking due to their nationality. But I recently heard of other nationalities (not Americans) who are refused bank access due to their nationality (in Europe, where we might have a high expectation of human rights).

I could never get the details. People that report this to me have been vague. But I’ve heard it twice now. Does anyone know the specifics? Which nationalities and why?

 

something in the sidebar about what this community covers would be useful.

(edit) it seems the name and title of the group differ.. one has an extra E.

 

cross-posted from !humanrights@crazypeople.online -- https://crazypeople.online/post/5464740

FATCA specifically oppresses Americans who live outside the US. It strong-arms banks into treating Americans adversely different based on their national origin (ranging from denial of service to extra data collection and disclosure). I thought Americans were the only people who broadly face discrimination in banking due to their nationality. But I recently heard of other nationalities (not Americans) who are refused bank access due to their nationality (in Europe, where we might have a high expectation of human rights).

I could never get the details. People that report this to me have been vague. But I’ve heard it twice now. Does anyone know the specifics? Which nationalities and why?

[–] rageAgainstCages@crazypeople.online 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

In the case of FATCA it is certainly not KYC. The rules require banks to look for “US indicia”, which specifies that they must collect proof of birthplace. If the birthplace is US soil, they are then treated as US citizens (as the US has birthright citizenship, although Trump is starting to tamper with that). People are singled out for different treatment because of their nationality (but only Americans, or so I thought). This happens /even if/ the customer has the local nationality, including “accidental Americans”, whose only reason for the US nationality is birthplace.

From there, if the bank is FATCA-participating, it is required to demand the customer’s US social security number, which is then furnished for export with that customer’s banking records to the US treasury. This has nothing to do with the sort of information you mention, which is local information that is presumably kept local.

The hints I heard of people of other nationalities facing discrimination seemed to be based on specific nationalities. One source even named a nationality but I forgot which one.

I think the reason for this is that it technically isn’t based on your ethnicity, rather on your citizenship, which makes it legal discrimination in most places.

When you say “legal discrimination”, that implies a context. Strictly speaking, banks can discriminate because human rights laws do not guarantee banking access. Article 2 of the UDHR lists categories that cannot be used for discrimination. One of those categories is national origin. BUT, article 2 only applies in connection with other articles in the UDHR. So e.g. you cannot discriminate against categories in Art.2 in the course of a housing transaction because housing is a human right. So if a housing transaction requires the use of a bank, and the bank discriminates on the basis of national origin, then you have a legal problem.

In any case, my question stands reguardless of whether the discrimination is legal or not. I’m just wondering what other nationalities face discrimination in banking. From there, legality can be complex. Laws themselves are sometimes illegal. e.g. FACTCA coupled with other national laws that force the use of banks in a transaction can violate international law (which is rarely enforced).

 

cross-posted from: https://crazypeople.online/post/5464740

FATCA specifically oppresses Americans who live outside the US. It strong-arms banks into treating Americans adversely different based on their national origin (ranging from denial of service to extra data collection and disclosure). I thought Americans were the only people who broadly face discrimination in banking due to their nationality. But I recently heard of other nationalities (not Americans) who are refused bank access due to their nationality (in Europe, where we might have a high expectation of human rights).

I could never get the details. People that report this to me have been vague. But I’ve heard it twice now. Does anyone know the specifics? Which nationalities and why?

 

cross-posted from: https://crazypeople.online/post/5464740

FATCA specifically oppresses Americans who live outside the US. It strong-arms banks into treating Americans adversely different based on their national origin (ranging from denial of service to extra data collection and disclosure). I thought Americans were the only people who broadly face discrimination in banking due to their nationality. But I recently heard of other nationalities (not Americans) who are refused bank access due to their nationality (in Europe, where we might have a high expectation of human rights).

I could never get the details. People that report this to me have been vague. But I’ve heard it twice now. Does anyone know the specifics? Which nationalities and why?

 

FATCA specifically oppresses Americans who live outside the US. It strong-arms banks into treating Americans adversely different based on their national origin (ranging from denial of service to extra data collection and disclosure). I thought Americans were the only people who broadly face discrimination in banking due to their nationality. But I recently heard of other nationalities (not Americans) who are refused bank access due to their nationality (in Europe, where we might have a high expectation of human rights).

I could never get the details. People that report this to me have been vague. But I’ve heard it twice now. Does anyone know the specifics? Which nationalities and why?