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Posts
437
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4,957
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Yeah that's my problem with this. The laws definitely can be abused. You think you can trust the government, but can you trust the police? Because in the end, they're the ones who will be doing the abuse.

    And if you eventually don't like the government that's in power, and want to protest and act against it, that's when these laws turn against you.

    We definitely should not sacrifice our privacy, rights, and freedoms in exchange for security. We learned that in 2001 after 9/11 and we shouldn't make the same mistake again just to make Trump happy.

  • Ah there we go. Now I understand what you mean. Thank you!

    As far as postal stuff goes, don't they only have the right to open packages, but not letters? And I don't think they have the right to get all our digital personal information either. At least not like they do in the U.S. Please correct me if I'm wrong.

    The “unreasonable” part of Section 8 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms is what protects us, but that doesn’t apply if you’re under investigation for crimes and stuff like a computer needs to be accessed as part of that investigation.

    It does apply. A warrant is required for confiscating and searching mail and computer equipment. It sounds here like it won't be required.

    I will repeat that the Canadian Government isn’t spewing the same vitriol against immigrants as the American Government, so neither the wording nor the content of the bill suggests some military backed deportation scheme.

    Maybe not, but it lays the ground for it though.

    In any case, as the guy mentioned, the bill isn't ALL bad. But there are some sections that can be worrisome and prone to exploitation.

  • I don't understand. Prove what? It's a bill. It's not passed into law yet. He's explaining how, if voted into law, these could be applied.

    Like the opening and searching of your mail and your personal electronic data without a warrant.

    That breaks article 8 of the charter of rights and freedoms.

    8. Everyone has the right to be secure against unreasonable search or seizure.

    Or deporting asylum seekers just because they've been in the country for a year on a visa. As written in the bill, if someone's been in Canada for a year ans a war breaks out in their country, they'd get deported without any question.

    I don't know why you're asking for proof. Do you not understand English?

  • How to install software on Windows (that I know of):

    • EXE installer that you download from the website (Linux equivalent to a binary installer that you downlaod)
    • MSI installer that you downlaod from the website (Linux equivalent to a .deb package I would say?)
    • Zip executable installer that you download from the website (Binary installer again?)
    • Standalone Zip that you download from the website (Standalone zip or tar file)
    • Microsoft Store (App store)
    • Chocolatey (Apt/Yum, etc)
    • Winget (Apt/Yum, etc)

    There's not sandboxed applications like Flatpaks or Snaps though, which provide an extra layer of security. Which would be great in Windows, honestly.

  • I'd like to hear your arguments in defense of Israel, a colony born out of an religious ideology in the early 20th century, that anyone with a certain faith, regardless of ethnicity, has historical rights to a land they, or their ancestors, never lived on.

  • From what I understand, they are using something like a pixel with associated JS code on a website to ring up their respective apps on localhost on the device to share browsing history.

    So if you're using uBlock and Privacy Badger which block these things, I think you shold be ok, yes?

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