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The Cuuuuube
Posts
14
Comments
663
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Yup. A lot of people don't vote because they don't feel heard. Well. We have a major opportunity right now with how unpopular Donald Trump is and his violent his band of weirdos are about to get. We can get in president Harris and then make ourselves heard as we stand against the violent weirdos. We can say "we the people of the united states of america don't stand for this nonsense. We don't stand for violence being what decides everything. We will resist violence with violence if we must, but we will not allow ourselves to rule with or be ruled by it. If we are going to continue living on this earth we must dismantle the global system of torture we live under and for good. The people of Palestine need to be free. The people of Africa can't constantly be at civil war for what's left of the resources we stole from them. And the Russian Federation cannot continue to be allowed to interfere in elections across the globe"

    Harris has made it clear she is willing to court us, willing to be seen listening to us, but she is not willing to like us or be of us. That's fine. Joe Biden has called himself a transition president. Perhaps Kamala will be, too. We just have to show that this matters to us, and that there's too many of us to stop the movement.

    I said in another comment that I see Harris as riding a wave of optimism, not as driving it. Well? We are that wave! It would be irresponsible for us to let her ride that wave into the white house without benefit to who's doing it. We must demand what we deserve from all this:

    • Food
    • Housing
    • Fair pay
    • Leisure time
    • Clean water
    • Healthcare
    • For our comforts not to come at the cost of torture with the only benefit going to the uber wealthy
  • Personally I think Harris is riding a wave of the uprising of hope. She is not driving it, but she has managed to tap into it and to give people who believe in the power of breaking free of pessimism a candidate who at least plays lip service to hopefulness even if here core values remain the typical doom and gloom. In many ways she's an updated version of Barrack Obama: aware of social issues and willing to engage with them, ultimately a neoliberal conservative. Unfortunately, this year, this is the best we're gonna get so a lot of people involved in the uprising of hope are going to, and should, vote for her. Its just we need to keep this all going. We need to vote in local elections for candidates who will give us superior voting systems to first past the pole, and we need to continue demonstrating in the streets for the decolonization of earth. Kamala wants us to shut up, and the democrats want to tell us the DNC isn't the right time to protest for the end of genocide. We need to show them they can't shut us down that easy. But we also need to avoid a Donald Trump presidency at all costs. So keep telling Kamala she's wrong about Israel. But also do vote for her. But then also make her presidency difficult without recognizing that sending F-35s to Israel is a subversion of the will of the people

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • Only reason I unblocked them was in case I needed to refute their claims anywhere. Suffice to say though, for anyone reading this, a good rule of thumb is if Possibly Linux says it, decent chance its untrue

  • Sure yeah. I think corpos suck, too. That's why I don't prefer 1password. But Firefox puts their passwords into a file, too (two actually). Key3.db and Logins.json, both with known locations, and encrypted using AES-256-GCM which is... Decent but I prefer to go a little more hardened. The thing with keepass is the following:

    1. Its open source, no corpo
    2. The file encryption you select can be as hardened as you want
    3. No one but you need know the location of your file
    4. It offers 2fa which Firefox password manager doesn't
    5. Firefox password manager is more susceptible to social engineering attacks is mainly what I was worried about but it seems like you've got a good handle on it.
    6. You don't have to integrate keepass with the browser to use it

    But I want to make it abundantly clear. @Dyskolos@lemmy.zip has not recommended storing your passwords in a file. They have suggested storing your passwords in a mechanism that can be as secure as your hardware is capable of securing and keeping the location of that up to your own decision making.

    But also. Promise me this. If you're going to keep using Firefox as your password manager:

    1. Don't use sync. That's run by Firefox's corporate arm, Mozilla PBC
    2. Use a primary password of at least 32 characters
    3. Consider rotating your password on a regular interval, like on your birthday
  • And remember. When someone older than you says "aspergers" they're probably misinformed and they think they're using the gentler more correct term. Be gentle in correcting them that we don't prefer or use that term anymore because it was coined by a doctor who sent anyone he diagnosed with it to death camps. It is rooted in a hateful label and autism spectrum disorder is the gentler preferred term.

    Trust me, its a way better way to get the point across and effect change. I speak from the personal experience of being 25 when I was told "oriental" is a racist and hateful term. I'd grown up all my life being told it was more respectful and kinder to call someone oriental than Asian. It was "common knowledge" throughout the northeast that entire time. But that wasn't where I grew up

    I encounter a lot of people both in person and online who think because they know something and its common knowledge in their communities that it must be common knowledge everywhere, and that just simply isn't true. Change and information reaches different communities and different times. Everyone lives in social bubbles and the internet has done more to reinforce this than it has to deconstruct our bubbles

  • Correction: yes it will. Source: that's how I installed it

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    No.

  • Cover the G logo with a pop socket or some shit. No one will give enough of a shit to desire your phone. Buying used always denies OEMs sales so its always good to buy used

  • Super cool that new privates headed to Iraq weren't alive when that particular conflict started. Super cooool

  • Using the internet without an adblocker is genuinely dangerous. Everyone really should be using uBlock Origin. Using a web browser that prevents uBlock Origin puts you in danger

  • I wonder if its because Beehaw is staying on 18.x while awaiting Sublinks

  • Lionir is talking about API implementations for everything to go off a single CSS file or a single icon pack. Not about the implementation of your personal desired aesthetic (I refuse to use the term rice, it has origins in racist car and motorcycle culture)

  • It will change policy at many hospitals and outpatient facilities. You should hear fewer stories from american women being told by their doctor that they did not receive any pain management or local anesthetic, and were told "you may feel a mild pinch"

  • If you use a deterministic password manager, make sure you make your master password strong

  • In-built password managers for browsers are straightforward to crack. Like… Terrifyingly easy. It's much better to use something like Bitwarden, Vaultwarden if you don't trust Bitwarden, 1Password if you really want the reassurance of paying someone for trust, or KeePass if you don't trust anyone at all (I, personally, fit into this category).

  • The ad company blocking an ad blocker is totally about security

    Google stans

  • Yeah please stop trying to act like multitasking on a small screen is something anyone wants. There's enough bugs out there for app switching to fix that you coulda focused on that instead of adding another half assed product on top of your current half assed product

  • Constituent states within the EU can have more laws on top of the EU's laws. Maybe things have changed since the last time I had to implement code to respect these laws, but as of two years ago Germany and Sweden were the two countries where we had to make the most considerations with Germany being VERY strong

  • Privacy law considerations. Germany is downright good for its citizens. The US has a round about spying industry. Brazil basically has mandatory mass surveilance. Everyone else's laws are more or less the same. Not identical. But Mozilla can meet their requirements pretty trivially

  • Messengers are not protocols. They use protocols. Most XMPP clients use the same encryption scheme Signal does only without being dependent on a single specific server, allowing users to spread out. I recommend reading about the differences between targeting developing a platform and developing protocols. Once you do, you'll see XMPP+Encryption in a better light than anything like Signal. The main problem in the current moment with XMPP+Encryption us that it isn't where the people are. Us tech weirdos can start the push into that space a little bit, but we need "Normies" to adopt to, and for that we need to be clear on what were talking about. Comparing XMPP to signal doesn't make sense. Comparing Cheogram to Signal does. And in the latter, cheogram frankly blows Signal out of the water for real privacy and security considerations