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17 votes
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Crabs, crustaceans, and pain
12 votes -
NGI Mobifree grants awarded for fair mobile software
6 votes -
Google is testing the ‘impact’ of removing EU news from search results
21 votes -
How should Europe build its own Silicon Valley?
11 votes -
The EU got 52% of its electricity from renewables in second quarter of 2024
31 votes -
Sweden abolishes tax on plastic bags despite warnings usage could rise – centre-right coalition government says consumption already below EU target
10 votes -
Using Euro coins as standard weights
11 votes -
Patent law is broken (USA) and EU (sort of)
24 votes -
Malaysian Palm Oil Council urges EU to delay implementation of deforestation law
16 votes -
Google loses €2.4bn EU antitrust case for favouring its own shopping service
33 votes -
Over the last ten years Finland reduced road deaths by a sizable 29% – the average decline in the European Union was 16%
18 votes -
Sweden to kill 20% of its brown bears in annual hunt – conservationists say number of hunting licences granted is too high and condemn it as ‘pure trophy hunting’
15 votes -
Sustainability of FOSS: The Next Generation Internet ecosystem
14 votes -
Sweden has cut 80% of its net emissions since 1990 – while growing its economy twofold. How have they done it?
31 votes -
Sideloading with iOS 17.4: any use cases?
It’s been a few weeks now since the release of iOS 17.4, which […] provides new options for app marketplaces, web browsers and payments for residents of the European Union. […] Now, don’t get me...
It’s been a few weeks now since the release of iOS 17.4, which
[…] provides new options for app marketplaces, web browsers and payments for residents of the European Union. […]
Now, don’t get me wrong, I am a firm believer in the underlying regulation to it, and have been ever since the possibility of this becoming a reality was in the Brussels air. But so far, I haven’t really been able to come up with a truly practical use case.
Furthermore, I haven’t seen any marketing for an Epic Store, Meta Store, or similar “app marketplaces”, but this may be attributed to the still rather… wobbly legal situation surrounding, notably, still having to direct payments to Apple while not using their store for app distribution. I don’t think there has been any follow-up from Apple (or the EU) that retracts these conditions.
So: Have any fellow EU resident ~tech’ies done anything fun or interesting with this new freedom yet?
To those not affected by this regulation, what would you like to “sideload”, or are perhaps already sideloading on Android?
Do any of you think big companies will move their entire palette onto an alternative store anytime soon, e.g. Facebook and sister products? To be honest, I doubt this will happen, otherwise it would’ve long occurred on the Google Play Store as well.
My ideas were:
- I’ve thought about trying to install Minecraft (the full version, probably using Pojav), or a game of similar caliber, on my phone just for fun and to see how well the iPhone GPU really fares against a “real” game, but didn’t find the time yet for looking into it.
- Also personally, I’d love to see a real “root-capable” shell on iOS, but I don’t think that will ever be a thing irrespective of how much sideloading Apple is forced to allow into their OS.
9 votes -
There's an EU petition to prevent publishers and devs from leaving games in unplayable states
70 votes -
Turkey and Germany in spicy feud over doner kebab
23 votes -
FOSS funding vanishes from EU's 2025 Horizon program plans. Elimination of most Next Generation Internet funding 'incomprehensible,' says OW2 CEO Pierre-Yves Gibello.
28 votes -
Set in an otherworldly landscape surrounded by glaciers, forests and lakes – how the Arctic town of Bodø became Europe's Capital of Culture
4 votes -
Court says Andrew Tate can leave Romania but remain in EU as he awaits trial
18 votes -
EU states push past opposition to adopt landmark nature restoration law
28 votes -
“Upload moderation” undermines end-to-endencryption: A statement from Meredith Whittaker, Signal president
28 votes -
Meta hit with Norwegian complaint over its plans to use images and posts of users on Facebook and Instagram to train artificial intelligence models
27 votes -
Sweden is set to become the second EU country to ban bottom fishing in marine protected areas
16 votes -
Spotify hikes fees, passing on its tax burden, after the French government introduced a levy to support the nation's music industry
21 votes -
Because European sunscreens can draw on more ingredients, they can protect better against skin cancer
26 votes -
EU's Green Deal improved its climate performance: a 1.5°C pathway is close
17 votes -
Cyber security: A pre-war reality check
34 votes -
ChatGPT provides false information about people, and OpenAI can’t correct it
47 votes -
Plant apocalypse: how new diseases are destroying EU trees and crops
7 votes -
Polish court orders Google to stop favouring its own price-comparison service in search results
16 votes -
Introducing AltStore PAL
7 votes -
Switzerland’s climate failures breached human rights, top court rules
4 votes -
Cracking down on Big Tech works. Brave, Firefox, Vivaldi surge on iOS.
25 votes -
European Union approves landmark AI law, leapfrogging US to regulate critical but worrying new technology
26 votes -
European Commission will open office in Greenland, made strategically important by rare resources and melting ice
7 votes -
European Super League cannot register its name as a trademark in the European Union because Denmark's top flight already holds the trademark rights
10 votes -
European crash tester says carmakers must bring back physical controls. In 2026, Euro NCAP points will be deducted if some controls aren't physical.
50 votes -
EU fines Apple €1.8bn over App Store restrictions on music streaming
26 votes -
Apple on course to break all Web Apps in EU within twenty days
37 votes -
EU fossil fuel CO2 emissions hit sixty-year low
11 votes -
A wolf killed EU president Ursula von der Leyen’s family pony, it ignited a high-stakes battle
27 votes -
Apple announces changes to iOS, Safari, and the App Store in the European Union
35 votes -
Question about GDPR
I am in the EU. I asked a company in which I had an account to delete my account. They told me they would do that as long as I sent them an ID and a postal address. This is to ensure that "I am...
I am in the EU.
I asked a company in which I had an account to delete my account. They told me they would do that as long as I sent them an ID and a postal address. This is to ensure that "I am the right person".
I never gave them an ID and a postal address in the first place so how would that verify anything, and I'm using the email that I used to sign-up with them to ask for the deletion.
Am I in the wrong to believe that this should be easier? Are they misinterpreting the GDPR or am I?
What are my options if I do not want to send my ID and postal address?
--
Their arguments are:
Article 5(1)(f) of the GDPR requires us to meet security obligations in data processing. Since data deletion is permanent, we need to ensure that the request is indeed from the person concerned.
Furthermore, Article 12(6) of the GDPR states: "…when the data controller has reasonable doubts concerning the identity of the natural person making the request referred to in Articles 15 to 21, he may request the provision of additional information necessary to confirm the identity of the data subject."
10 votes -
Plant-based spread maker tries move into paper-based tubs
13 votes -
EU Cyber Resilience Act: What does it mean for open source?
13 votes -
Why Europe fails to create wealth
27 votes -
Sculptor sues Swedish glassmaker Kosta Boda for €1m in test of EU ‘bestseller clause’ – landmark case may open door to retrospective claims across bloc
6 votes -
Finland and Italy seek to hinder restrictions on single-use packaging ahead of next week's gathering of EU ministers in Brussels
11 votes