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Joined 2 months ago
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Cake day: February 10th, 2025

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  • Load it and it fingerprints your browser. You can add a signature to that fingerprint.

    Make whatever changes you want to make to resist fingerprinting and reload the page. If it displays your signature then it has identified you, if not then your changes worked.

    Ideally, every page refresh would generate a new unique fingerprint so the page can’t link you to the last time you loaded the page (which is what tracking is, essentially)

    The site also displays all of the data that it can see, for advanced users


  • This whole thread seems to be, primarily, people inventing strawmen and them a comment thread dogpiling them.

    We have the “elitist Linux question answerer” and the “average user who is grandmother of 93 years that faints at the sight of terminal text” taking a lot of heat.

    Many of stray shots at developers for having the audacity to provide access to the software that they made in their spare time without providing a full UX that compares to IOS.

    The “fellow Linux users” who installed Linux 5 years ago, ran into a problem and declared Linux a failed experiment.


    The OP isn’t even a good meme. It’s just ragebait.

    The people who post these kind of things are not trying to improve the community. They’re concern trolling.

    Nobody is “preventing simplification”. Anyone is more than welcome to fire up an IDE, clone a project and simplify whatever they feel like. That’s how the open source software ecosystem works. If you don’t like something then fix it.

    You’re not a customer, you’re a community member. Making demands of other people isn’t going to go over well, but it isn’t because people are “elitist”.


  • I learned how to make a dual boot machine first.

    My friend wanted to get me to install it, but he had a 2nd machine to run Windows on. So we figured out how to dual boot.

    And then we learned how to fix windows boot issues 😮‍💨

    We mostly did it for the challenge. Those Linux Magazine CDs with new distros and software were a monthly challenge of “How can I install this and also not destroy my ability to play Diablo?”

    I definitely have lost at least one install to getting stuck in vim, flailing the keyboard and writing garbage data into a critical config file before rebooting.

    Modern Linux is amazing in comparison, you can use it for essentially any task and it still has a capacity for customization that is astonishing.

    The early days were interesting if you like getting lost in the terminal and figuring things out without a search engine. Lots of trial and error, finding documentation, reading documentation, etc.

    It was interesting, but be glad you have access to modern Linux. There’s more to explore, better documentation, and the capabilities that you can pull in are still astonishing.






  • The CVE system protects everyone that uses computers. It is a public service that forms the core of cybersecurity in the US and many other places. It does not cost the database any more money if people use it to provide services to clients.

    Letting a private corporation take it over and put it behind a paywall now means that security, like so many other things, will only be available to people with money. It will make software and hardware more expensive by adding yet another license fee or subscription if you want software that gets security updates.

    In addition, a closed database is just less useful. This system works because when one person notifies the system of an exploit then every other person now knows. That kind of system is much higher quality if you have more people that are able to access it.

    An industry being created and earning money by providing cybersecurity services shows how useful such a system is for everyone. There are good paying jobs that depend on this data being freely available. New startups only need to provide service, they don’t need to raise the funds to buy into the security database because it is a public service. They also pay taxes (a significant amount if they’re charging $30,000 per audit), more than enough profit for the government to operate a database.






  • Otherwise I think that the idea of deleting all IP laws is just wishful (and naive) thinking, assuming people would cooperate and build on each other’s inventions/creations.

    Given the state the world is currently in, I don’t see that happening soon.

    There are plenty of examples of open sharing systems that are functional.

    Science, for example. Nobody ‘owns’ the formulas that calculate orbits or the underlying mathematics that AI models are built on like Transformer networks or convolutional networks. The information is openly shared and given away to everyone that wants it and it is so powerful it has completely reshaped society everywhere on the Earth (except the Sentinel Islands).

    Open Source projects, like Linux, are the foundation of the modern tech world. The ‘IP’ is freely available and you can copy or modify it as much as you’d like. Linus ‘owns’ the Linux project but anyone is free to take a copy of the Linux source code and modify it to whatever extent that they would like and form their own project.

    Much of the software and services that people use are built on top of open source tools made by volunteers, for free; and most of the useful knowledge and progress for human society results from breakthroughs made in the sciences, who’s discoveries are also free and openly shared.






  • FauxLiving@lemmy.worldtolinuxmemes@lemmy.world./build.sh
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    12 days ago

    He didn’t really compile his own OS, he used build tools to make slop-binaries.

    It only counts if the user manually types the binary files using only a Morse code key because we all know that using software to make your job easier only produces slop and the only REAL way to do anything is completely manually.