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26 votes
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How you use YouTube in desktop and mobile devices. YouTube to limit usage of ad blockers soon.
YouTube limits ad blocker usage in new test YouTube could be testing a three-strikes policy for ad blocking (Update) So its clear now that YouTube is going to limit the usage of Ad blockers in the...
YouTube limits ad blocker usage in new test
YouTube could be testing a three-strikes policy for ad blocking (Update)
So its clear now that YouTube is going to limit the usage of Ad blockers in the coming future
I use Ublock Orgin with Firefox which basically used to block all ads and on mobile device I use NewPipe110 votes -
How I hacked CASIO F-91W digital watch to support NFC payments
10 votes -
Why I don't like ads
65 votes -
Where to find digitalized illustrations from the past such as these?
5 votes -
Google's epic multi-billion dollar ad scam makes sense to us
38 votes -
Why are we often hesitant to spend money on digital services?
This is sort of a "does anyone else?" type question, but I think it can create some interesting discussion. We have become accustomed to having many things for free online. Search, social media,...
This is sort of a "does anyone else?" type question, but I think it can create some interesting discussion.
We have become accustomed to having many things for free online. Search, social media, news, videos, games etc. The price of course is ads and our personal data. But spending money on these kinds of services that exists for free sometimes feels like a hurdle to overcome. I recently gave the paid search engine Kagi a try, and I spent way too much time pondering whether it was worth the $5. Yet I can spend ten times as much on random physical purchases or a round drinks with only a few seconds of decision making.
Even though we have lived with digital products for decades now, having something tangible and physical between your fingers still feels better. With some exceptions, because most people are paying for streaming services but renting movies in the video store have always cost money, so we are used to that - unlike stuff like search and email which many of us have gotten used to being available for free.
Can this ever change outside very tech-minded people? Because services that rely on subscriptions rather than dataharvesting and ads do exist, but with the exceptions of maybe the big streaming services, few get wider appeal and the masses flock to the so-called free services instead. I find it almost depressing that we have all these brilliant and innovative tech companies around the world doing amazing things, but a good deal of it all ends up with the goal of showing more ads. It is hard to compete with free, but is it possible to challenge the current most successful business model of "paying" with ads and data?
36 votes -
Man unable to interact with any of his smart devices for a week after delivery driver accuses him of being racist
89 votes -
News Music Search Archive
3 votes -
Art Fight is happening next month, are you participating?
For those that don't know, Art Fight is a collaborative creative project that sorts artists into two teams and lets them upload their original characters. In order to score points for your team,...
For those that don't know, Art Fight is a collaborative creative project that sorts artists into two teams and lets them upload their original characters. In order to score points for your team, you have to draw the other team's characters, with more involved and polished artworks scoring higher points. I'm participating for the fourth time this year, and if you're going to as well, feel free to drop your art fight URLs in the comments so we can follow and "attack" one another!
11 votes -
Google risks forced breakup of ad business as EU alleges shocking misconduct
16 votes -
Is it even worthwhile to turn off ad personalization or location tracking for services/apps?
So, I’m moving to a new phone and revisiting a lot of accounts, apps, and settings. When it comes to things like location history or ad personalization or whatever, is it even worthwhile to turn...
So, I’m moving to a new phone and revisiting a lot of accounts, apps, and settings.
When it comes to things like location history or ad personalization or whatever, is it even worthwhile to turn it off? Am I really supposed to believe that because I have some toggle off that Google suddenly doesn’t track where I drive on Maps? Like if they are going to be tracking me, which I assume they are, I might as well be able to see it to rather than have it exist in the aether somewhere where the info is attributed to me but not viewable in the UI.
Even with ads, I know shadow profiles are a thing, and that they definitely have data beyond what they show in the UI, so might as well opt in there too right? Plus, the non-targeted ads I get are basically porn-tier ads or stuff for gay men.
What should I do here? Move into the woods? Feels like I can’t win.
22 votes -
Ripples through Reddit as advertisers weather moderators strike
63 votes -
Spotify fined in Sweden over GDPR data access complaint – coming more than four years after a complaint was lodged by noyb
9 votes -
r/DataHoarder project to archive reddit before the API changes (link to request a copy of your personal data in comments)
21 votes -
The Digital Transportation Archive
7 votes -
Vice, decayed digital colossus, files for bankruptcy
21 votes -
The Vietnamese military has a troll army and Facebook is its weapon
8 votes -
DLARC Radio Library surpasses 75,000 items of ham radio, shortwave history
2 votes -
Buzzfeed News is shutting down, laying off 15% of its US workforce
11 votes -
DPReview.com to close
9 votes -
Cerebral admits to sharing US patient data with Meta, TikTok, and Google
12 votes -
LockPickingLawyer (literally) slaps open a MojoBox digital lockbox
22 votes -
Humanity’s written heritage, preserved forever
9 votes -
What will "classically trained" look like for computer science and digital literacy?
This might be a weird framing but it's been bugging me for a few days. Many fields have a concept of classical training -- this is most common in music but applies in the humanities and many other...
This might be a weird framing but it's been bugging me for a few days. Many fields have a concept of classical training -- this is most common in music but applies in the humanities and many other areas. For example I do a lot of CAD work for my job, but I received what I would consider a "classical education" in design...I learned to draft by hand and physically model before I was ever allowed to work digitally. I got a lot of value out of this approach and it still informs the way I work today.
A lot of people view computers and technology as modern and almost anti-classical, but as the tech industry matures and the internet moves from something shiny and new to something foundational to our society, what will the new classicism look like?
Thanks for reading my question.
14 votes -
BuzzFeed says it will use AI to help create content, stock jumps 150%
8 votes -
Ad spending on Twitter falls by over 70% in Dec - data
10 votes -
Meta prohibited from use of personal data for advertisement in Europe
22 votes -
How bad is music gear from Wish.com?
4 votes -
The Internet Archive just put 565 Palm Pilot apps in your web browser
12 votes -
Most Amazon search results are ads
8 votes -
Elon Musk bans remote work at Twitter, warns staff of “dire” economic outlook
16 votes -
A vast majority of people in the US and Canada suspect their smart speakers can eavesdrop on their conversations, and just over two-thirds think they’ve gotten ads based on that snooping
21 votes -
Google to remove all VPN ad blockers that don’t comply with their policy
14 votes -
Researchers have been given a £420,000 grant to explore the potential use of a blockchain-based voting system in Greenland
3 votes -
Denmark is using Patient Reported Outcome questionnaires to improve medical care – can the patient's perception of the disease become part of the treatment?
4 votes -
US Federal law now requires distribution of complete healthcare records to patients in digital formats
11 votes -
Norway's digital currency experiment – what is it and how does it work?
6 votes -
When a modern director makes a fake old movie
3 votes -
Californians and other Americans are flooding Mexico City. Some locals want them to go home.
13 votes -
Google’s new Play Store rules target annoying ads and copycat crypto apps
8 votes -
‘Supercookies’ have privacy experts sounding the alarm
12 votes -
Is your smartphone ruining your memory? A special report on the rise of ‘digital amnesia’
12 votes -
The philosophical guide to software piracy
14 votes -
Twilight of the libraries: What gets lost when books go off-site and online
4 votes -
TikTok turns on the money machine
8 votes -
The impact of digital media on children’s intelligence
10 votes -
Pinterest bans climate change misinformation and conspiracy theories
9 votes -
Films made for Netflix look more like TV shows — here’s the technical reason why
12 votes -
YouTube Vanced is discontinued
25 votes