tired_fedora

joined 1 week ago
[–] tired_fedora@lemmy.ml 1 points 15 hours ago

Thanks for the tip. Did not know. e/os is not Graphene but definitely an upgrade! There are also other companies selling pre-Graphened smartphones, but they are not fair. The reason I suggested a formal fairphone - graphene collab is that I trust Fairphone, as a company, to mean well, and I trust GrapheneOS, as an operating system, to be particularly privacy friendly. (and also as a slight slight at the fairphone - graphene feud, which I find just so sighs).

 

Dear fairphone team, wouldn't it be awesome if you developed your next fairphone with GrapheneOS in mind, ship with GrapheneOS as standard OS, or at least have that as an option? The privacy-conscious crowd and the eco-friendly tech crowd have so much in common! You enjoy immense trust, which would be a great anchor for eco-friendly people to join the flock of privacy-conscious phone and internet users. On the other hand, it could serve as an anchor for privacy-conscious people to get into the societal and eco-friendly tech market; instead of throwing their money at Google for homebrew-Graphene'd Pixel phones.

Hopeful, tired_fedora

PS: I know there was this whole thing about GrapheneOS and fairphone snapping at each other about update cycles but it's time to move past that and forge a productive collaboration for the common good. This could be the beginning of a beautiful friendship. dances off into a field of tulips

[–] tired_fedora@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 day ago

Second this and adding: Fiduciary responsibility and how US economic law places it above all else. Other jurisdictions, particularly in Europe, require companies to balance multiple responsibilities, such as towards their workforce, societal, ecological, and yes, fiduciary, too. It doesn't solve all issues and can be vague AF, but at least well-meaning CEOs can fall back to these other corporate responsibilities in court while the same CEO would be sued into oblivion by US shareholders.

[–] tired_fedora@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 day ago

I'm not ideologically opposed to people earning money with their unique ideas and artistic execution. Creative work is work is work. But I don't think that IP should be the gift that keeps on giving three generations after an authors death. IMHO, the public has a reasonable interest in works remaining available, that's why the "maintenance / out of print" clause. Writing good code is authorship. It's only natural the same rules apply, though I wouldn't be principally opposed to applying different time lines, e.g., 5 years for unmaintained proprietary code vs 20 years for books, to reflect the uniquely fast pace of software development vs the more long-lasting beauty of traditional art and literature. Of course there would need to be some very careful wording to define maintenance (e.g., in respect to which platform? What about versions of the same software) and to prevent on-paper continued availability of books at an inappropriately increased price. However, I believe the law makers and the courts could handle this medium diff if there was political will.

[–] tired_fedora@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Yeah, how about we shorten that to a cumulative 10 years out of support / maintenance / print or after the death of the author / artist, whatever earlier. For software, a five years out of support threshold would honestly be preferable but I'll be generous.

 

Hi folks, I recently switched to Mullvad Browser and I like it. However, I have a hard time getting used to the minimal extensions included (and hard recommendation not to install any more not to add to the fingerprint). Do y'all really not use any in-browser password manager?

Right now, I run my PWM in a separate window, so I can just copy-paste, but autofill sure is a nice utility.

Thanks for your considerations.

[–] tired_fedora@lemmy.ml 35 points 2 days ago (5 children)

Software that is not actively maintained for a certain time should become public property. The same goes for books or music that go out of print for so long. "you want to sell me your original product? That's cool. You don't wanna do that anymore? Alright, but no need to bury it in obscurity."

[–] tired_fedora@lemmy.ml 1 points 4 days ago

Appreciate the recommendations. I will give IronFox a try.

 

Hi there. I'm looking for advice to improve my online privacy while browing on android. I'm currently using vanilla Firefox, strict enhanced Tracking protection (fix major site errors), HTTPS-only mode, default dns, no technical data collection, delete cookies / cache / page data on quit. As extensions, I use only Decentraleyes and uBlock extensions. However, I heard vague warnings from the privacy community about using vanilla Firefox with self-hardened privacy-conscious settings, because my settings and yours might be sligthtly different, introducing entropy that can be used for fingerprinting. The only browser I recognize by name on F-Droid is LibreLynx Lite, which is barely customizable (e.g., no 'decline cookies' or 'delete cookies on restart' setting without subscribing to pro) and was last updated 7 months ago. People on the web recommend 'Mull for android', but that was last updated in 2024 and is not on F-droid anymore. I am not generally opposed but a little candid about using Brave or DuckDuckGo Browser, as these are built on Chromium and I would prefer to stay within the Firefox ecosystem. I am also naively a fan of 'hiding in the crowd': using a common browser / what looks like a common browser to a web page being more private than using a super niche one.

Any well-supported security-hardened Firefox forks on Android to speak of? Any other recommendations?

Thanks for your thoughts.

[–] tired_fedora@lemmy.ml 1 points 5 days ago

Could be some Spiralism / Ai religion fan (club)

[–] tired_fedora@lemmy.ml 5 points 6 days ago

I often feel a little 'legislative paralysis'. On the one hand, I want as little government interference in the free web as possible. On the other hand we can see first hand that web anarchy collapses into web oligarchy. I guess the EU is demonstrating that targeted legislation, like one click unsubscribe or one click cookie denial, can improve the web experience and privacy even beyond their borders. Baby steps... When do we get one click delete all my data? And when does a single page start caring whether my browser sends a Do not track request or not? Until then, it's back to private privacy measures... Even if that's an uphill battle.