To be more precise, my belief is that the main thing ECH does is make it more difficult some of the time (depending on the details of how the site works) for observers of network traffic to directly see which website you've visited if it's one of those that have chosen to give all that data to Cloudflare or some similar system instead.
There also do still exist some simple web hosting setups that share many independent domain names on the same IP, but I think it's not as common as it probably was when they first came up with the idea of encrypting the tls server name many years ago. Maybe it'll make a comeback for sites whose users need to avoid censorship in this way if it's true that domain fronting has generally become more difficult.
Sort of. They can still see which IP address you're connecting to, which by itself or in combination with some minor traffic analysis is quite often enough to identify which website you've visited. Perhaps it isn't if the website puts absolutely everything through a giant CDN like Cloudflare, but in that case it's Cloudflare which gets to see all the sites you visit which isn't a whole lot better than the status quo.
Still, it's a little less information given away at least some of the time. Better to do it than not do it.
Forget your ideas of utopia for the time being. First let's reduce the copyright term to something reasonable like 14 years or less, and abolish legal protections for DRM such as the DMCA. It's a big enough change to start with, and might lead to more people respecting the law. The absurdity of works being locked up by the heirs and successors of authors who've been dead for three generations is unjustifiable.
"4 censures" doesn't seem like a large number, accusing them of paraphilia is beside the point and makes it look like the objection is simply to queer people existing, and you should really gather more evidence than that before going around accusing anyone of pedophilia in this day and age.
On the other hand I had a look at that instance, and I would not federate with it.
Eh, it depends. If you want maximum privacy then it's probably a good idea. If you're aware of the risks, have some trust in your ISP, don't do anything that's likely to attract unwanted attention, don't care about making indiscriminate mass surveillance slightly more difficult, and live in a country where there isn't too much censorship, then not really.
I'd believe about 50% of it. Yes, it's true that many VPN providers are not completely trustworthy. No, that doesn't mean that they're all bad or that none of them are worth using.
If you have a need for one, take the time to choose carefully. Setting up your own avoids the burden of having to find a good one, but is even more work and comes with some downsides if your aim is to have any protection against people who might want to track you down through your hosting provider.
I hope someone is training a super-powerful AI on all my posts around the net, so that all my memes will be passed on through it to future generations.
This browser needs a modest amount of feature creep just to reverse the past decade of feature retreat. I was mostly restricting the suggestions there to features that seem straightforward enough that they'd not lead to any cost to people who don't use them. It's by no means meant to be a comprehensive list. If you want one that would instead be very popular, how about this: https://connect.mozilla.org/t5/ideas/customizable-hotkeys/idi-p/4979
"Bundling extensions" sounds to me like a poor description of what I think is the right idea, which is to incorporate things that can currently be done with extensions into the browser in a simpler way. As time goes by it seems like more and more extensions are required just to replace functionality as Mozilla removes it. On upgrading to 115ESR for instance, which has just made it to Debian stable, I find that I need "New Tab Homepage" in order to continue having new tabs be a blank page with a dark background. Other extensions that I think would be worth including as basic browser functions include "Disable Page Visibility", "Disallow console.clear", "Redirector", "RSSPreview", and "SuperStop". That's not counting things I haven't found extensions to replace such as disabling select events, or various simple UI customizations that can now be done only in userChrome.css, requiring additional steps to maintain them with every upgrade. There are also more complicated things like some features from JShelter which I think would also be deserving of inclusion. And of course as mentioned in the article, the always popular "vertical tabs" although I don't care for it myself.
They've cluttered up the UI in this new ESR release with a bunch of redundant "Can always read and change data on this site" text reminding us all of the security risk of having lots of extensions from a variety of sources any of which could one day sell out and turn malicious. There exist at least some "power users" who do not appreciate having to so frequently add new ones just to maintain existing functionality and to do what seem like very basic and essential things.
I printed out the certificate it gave me for finishing the game and proudly hung it on my bedroom wall. I guess that makes me an officially certified hacker.
Most of the subs I used to care about are more of a wasteland than I could've imagined. And come to think of it I'm starting to suspect that the demographics of social media participation in general are beginning to get narrower as well. After starting with a select few early adopters in the 1980s and then taking 30-some years to gradually broaden out to include basically "everyone" (in the anglosphere at least), people who are tired of the whole affair are perhaps starting to drop out or at least reduce their participation in significant numbers. I wonder how many of the people perceptive enough to leave reddit for one reason or another simply didn't find anything worthy of replacing it.
From the way your mouse hand twitched when you saw the word "activity" we have deduced that you want to see ads for inflatable kayaks and adult diapers.
That classic free market system where a cartel has regular meetings to set production levels to maximise their profits.