This is scary. It's (strong) SafetyNet for websites.
Every now and then I run into another Android app I can no longer run because someone decided my phone, running an official build of my choice of OS, that isn't even rooted, is "not trustable".
Now they want to start doing that for websites.
This kills open Linux on the desktop (including Asahi Linux). It kills alternative browsers. It is a backdoor to kill ad blockers.
No. Just no. Please.
https://github.com/RupertBenWiser/Web-Environment-Integrity/blob/main/explainer.md
In “Bullshit Jobs,” David Graeber reminds us of another feature of medieval labor, even bonded labor, that is the envy of most of us today:
“The main reason why work could remain so irregular was because it was largely unsupervised. This is true not only of medieval feudalism but also of most labor arrangements anywhere until relatively recent times. It was true even if those labor arrangements were strikingly unequal. If those on the bottom produced what was required of them, those on top didn’t really feel they should have to be bothered knowing what that entailed.”
Bob Black made a similar point in “The Abolition of Work”:
“The degradation which most workers experience on the job is the sum of assorted indignities which can be denominated as ‘discipline.’…Discipline consists of the totality of totalitarian controls at the workplace—surveillance, rotework, imposed work tempos, production quotas, punching-in and out, etc. Discipline is what the factory and the office and the store share with the prison and the school and the mental hospital. It is something historically original and horrible. It was beyond the capacities of such demonic dictators of yore as Nero and Genghis Khan and Ivan the Terrible. For all their bad intentions they just didn’t have the machinery to control their subjects as thoroughly as modern despots do.”
8/many
“Have you ever stopped to consider that you’re the bad guys?”
https://github.com/RupertBenWiser/Web-Environment-Integrity/issues/127
#Google #SiliconValley #SurveillanceCapitalism #W3C #PeopleFarming #adtech #WebEnvironmentIntegrity #web #DRM #privacy #standards
Hey chooms!
It's a pulsating month filled with cybertastic things, and today, we've got an cybertastic surprise to unveil!
Our esteemed choom, @tihyltew, has birthed a top-tier creation, the ultimate mascot for our digital sanctuary.
Meet John Cyberdon! :cyberdon:
John Cyberdon is your guardian, shielding you from the relentless watchful eyes of NetWatch. With razor-sharp instincts and a heart of circuitry, he's your virtual sentinel, always one step ahead of any lurking threat.
So, slip into your cyberdeck and join our electrified faction, as we ride the information highways with John Cyberdon by our side, fearlessly exploring the untamed frontiers of the net!
Together, we'll forge a path through the datakrashed-soaked chaos, securing a future where the digital realm is truly free.
Secure your netruns (not your soul) with John Cyberdon! CC-BY-SA license lets you take him anywhere. Unleash digital freedom!
This is a credible proposal for DRM for websites in general. It would enable unbeatable adblock-blocking. It would prevent user customization for not just convenience but also accessibility.
I do not say this lightly: Enabling the forfeiture of control over the browsing experience is a fundamentally evil idea that must be rejected now, as it has been in the past, and we must remain vigilant against its reemergence in the future.
https://github.com/RupertBenWiser/Web-Environment-Integrity/blob/main/explainer.md
So the CEO of online ads giant IAB made a pretty… remarkable speech, saying:
"These extremists (referring to privacy advocates) are political opportunists who’ve made it their mission to cripple the advertising industry and eliminate it from the American economy and culture."
And this, friends, is our mission statement RIGHT THERE.
Our first Causal Islands Podcast🎙️ is recording live in just one hour! Join Discord to ask Michael, Chia, and Quinn your questions - https://discord.gg/xYVAzPyk #futureofcomputing #podcast #tech
Peer-to-peer networks are the foundation of the decentralized web. Today we dive into what P2P networks are, how they differ from the popular client-server model, and the advantages of decentralized file sharing in P2P networks. https://fission.codes/blog/introduction-to-p2p-networks/ #p2p #dweb
Hanging out in #Toronto this week. :)
I am floored and fascinated by the near-literary quality of many of the descriptions of images that people carefully craft when appending pictures to their posts on Mastodon. Some of them will reveal a detail that had escaped my attention. Others will help me understand a subtle joke I had missed. Others still are true poems. ALT are their own microblogging world that reveals itself as you hover on a picture. And I hover, and hover.
The thing about the fedi is that if you act like an utter dickhead in people's mentions, people notice.
And some of those people are admins who don't need anyone's permission to suspend you from their server.
I hate that innocent people have to face that abuse first.
But admins of your server have the ability to ban someone, even if they are on another server.
That doesn't ban them from the server they are on, but at least ensures no one else on your server will have to deal with them.
That's why Reports are useful. You're basically sending a message to the mods of your server saying, "This dickhead okay with you?"
Do not hesitate to do this, even if the offender isn't on your server.
@carnage4life It seems to me there’s a not-collusion-but-nudge-nudge-wink-wink “something in the air” trend in the tech industry to lay people off. It started late last year, but companies are still trying to see how long they can continue to lay people off in dribs and drabs, to take advantage of the fact that people currently can’t go to competitors for better pay. This seems like a continuation of that trend to me.
I think their short term goal is to goose profits by reducing payroll, but the medium term goal is to backfill positions in a year at a lower pay rate—because companies still need laborers to do work to remain competitive.
I also think companies are (not so) secretly hoping that AI will prove to be an effective replacement for many of the laid-off employees this year, so they wouldn’t have to rehire.
Just presented this today. Took an hour longer than planned but I think that's a good sign!
Secret (not really) sneak peek at some #p2p #database stuff I'm working on.
https://hackmd.io/@s74XZjUBQDuPPS04AgPvow/Skxz6mGqn#/1
Also Code: https://github.com/RangerMauve/ipld-prolly-indexer/tree/initial
Occult Enby that's making local-first software with peer to peer protocols, mesh networks, and the web.
Exploring what a local-first cyberspace might look like in my spare time.