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Android apps are blocking sideloading and forcing Google Play versions instead
  • Never ask a company to pick between the right thing and profit.

    It's fundamentally impossible for a publicly traded company not to choose profit over 'The Right Thing', fullstop. Shareholders feel that have a fundamental right to growth, and if Google's CEO were to choose 'The Right Thing' over profit, the shareholders can oust them in favor of a CEO willing to choose profits.

    Enshittification is where every public company ends up, because the line MUST go up, no other alternative is acceptable.

  • Biden to announce plans to reform US supreme court – report
  • If you win the house and Senate with a majority then, you remove those that are extremely corrupt.

    Democrats would need a supermajority in the Senate to achieve that. Anything less than 2/3rds and nobody gets removed.

  • Firefox added ad tracking and has already turned it on without asking you
  • I can't help but see it as the foot in the door.

    I understand that Mozilla needs money, but I can't make everyone who uses Firefox commit to donating money to keep them from having to do things like this to stay afloat. But them going down this path makes me not want to donate at all.

  • Firefox added ad tracking and has already turned it on without asking you
  • I never said I was, just that I wanted to support the browser that respects my privacy, and this move is making me reconsider it.

    As long as it's open source someone will be able to find a way to turn it off, either by an addon or by patching and compiling the source code.

  • Firefox added ad tracking and has already turned it on without asking you
  • IMO, that's splitting a hair.

    For a browser that supposedly respects user privacy, the fact that this is opt-out rather than opt-in really leaves a bad taste in my mouth.

    I'm going to reconsider my monthly recurring donation to Mozilla, especially if they keep this up.

  • Home routing and encryption technologies are making lawful interception harder, Europol warns
  • Even if law enforcement can get a warrant, unless there's a backdoor in the encryption then the data stays private. That's the whole point of encryption.

    The fundamental problem is law enforcement feeling entitled to snoop on private communications with a warrant vs the inherent security flaw with making a backdoor in encrypted communications. The backdoor will eventually get exploited, either by reverse engineering/tinkering or someone leaking keys, and then encryption becomes useless. The only way encryption works is if the data can only be decrypted by one key.

    Anyone else remember when TSA published a picture of the master key set for TSA approved luggage locks and people had modeled and printed replicas within hours?

  • Anon thinks about Google
  • I guess I should point out I live and work in coastal Georgia.

    So I dunno why I have such a different experience. I'm on my phone a lot calling people and using GPS with no overheating issues unless it's in direct sunlight for too long.

  • ‘It has officially happened’: Mechanic says he can’t work on your car because they’ve officially been locked out of computer systems
  • That's treating people as Humans. But in our capitalist hellscape, we aren't people, we're Consumers. We exist to provide money to companies, and they're ever interested in finding more ways to make us give them money.

    It's not enough that you buy a TV, the manufacturer needs to have ads in it. They need the telemetry on what you watch, when you watch it, and for how long so they can make the ads more relevant. We can't have you replacing your phone battery, so we'll make it an internal component so when it goes bad you're more likely to just get a new phone.

    But we can't pay people more, because that's an expense.

    The line must go up at all costs.

  • People doing the 30 days linux Challenge are having several problems because of Mint's old packages and technology. Why people still recommend it when there is Fedora and Opensuse with KDE and Gnome?
  • Windows is way more documented. Not necessarily by Microsoft but by the absolute waste community.

    If I had a nickle for every BSOD error code I researched only to find "have you tried running sfc /scannow? What about a refresh? You tried both and nothing worked? Just reinstall!"

    More documented my ass. Linux at least tells me what's wrong. "No space left on device" or "missing dependency" is way better than "Error code 0x0000007e"

  • Anon thinks about Google
  • I have a pixel 6a that I use a lot, and it only overheats if I leave it in the phone holder in my work truck when I park in the sun.

    What are you doing that causes the phone to work that hard?

  • Microsoft has gone too far: including a Game Pass ad in the Settings app ushers in a whole new age of ridiculous over-advertising
  • I think my favorite part of swapping has been forgetting how Windows does things. I'm so embedded in Linux and how it works every day that I don't remember where to go for certain things in Windows without having to search.

    I remember some power user shortcuts like run prompt shortcuts (appwiz.cpl or control userpasswords2) but I used to be able to walk people through how to get certain pages in the Windows UI, and I couldn't do it today.

  • Anon thinks about Google
  • I only replaced my Pixel 2 with a Pixel 6a because the screen broke. Took it to a repair place and the screen stopped working after replacement.

    I had that phone for ~8 years and I hope to get similar mileage out of my 6a.

  • InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)BL
    BluescreenOfDeath @lemmy.world
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