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10 votes
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Reality check: EU Council chat control vote is not a retreat, but a green light for indiscriminate mass surveillance and the end of right to communicate anonymously
31 votes -
EU backs away from chat control
32 votes -
New X/Twitter feature revealed many MAGA influencers to be foreigners
49 votes -
US Army to buy one million drones, in major acquisition ramp-up
7 votes -
Poland launching largest voluntary military training program in its history
11 votes -
Python Foundation goes ride or DEI, rejects US government grant with strings attached
53 votes -
US President Donald Trump admin’s racist Halo memes are ‘a new level of dehumanization of immigrants’
26 votes -
Super PAC aims to drown out AI critics in US midterms, with $100M and counting
24 votes -
The absurd Tennessee prosecution of a man who posted a Charlie Kirk meme
36 votes -
Do other people who grew up with an anonymous internet feel a bit hopeless at the moment?
I'm posting this in ~society rather than ~tech, as I feel like it's more a question of societal change and policy decisions rather than tech change. Please feel free to move if I'm wrong. Seeing...
I'm posting this in ~society rather than ~tech, as I feel like it's more a question of societal change and policy decisions rather than tech change. Please feel free to move if I'm wrong.
Seeing the predictable Discord data breach for age verification, it feels like the walls are closing in. My country has announced a similar policy to the UK just recently and I feel a sense of loss for a crucial part of my life that may go away.
I don't think I'm being too nostalgic by saying that I felt much more comfortable speaking freely on the internet when anonymity was the default. I didn't engage in any illegal activity - or even in my view immoral activity. I just made friends from around the world and learned a lot.
I am not making the argument that the internet of the 90's and 00's were 'safer' - I'm sure there is plenty of bad things that happened without me being aware. But this theoretical bad stuff is still being used to make us mandatorily give our government issued identity documents to corporate entities, and it's not paranoia to think they want to find a way to profit from this, and not invest heavily to defend it.
I get the structural forces that are driving this change, but it still makes me sad. I feel like I'm running a defensive cyber operation with no training or expertise. I do my best to stay private with VPNs, tracker blocking, DNS filters, but I feel like I'm losing. We have a whole department for this at work and they are very busy - I am just a lay person doing their best.
No matter what I do, either the governments of the world or surveillance capitalists will build up a picture of who I am far beyond what I am comfortable with. My meagre efforts are like trying to stop the tide by kicking it.
Do others who grew up with a more open, more anonymous internet feel similarly? Do you try and protect your privacy, are you resigned, or are you somewhere in the middle?
55 votes -
Who owns America? Bernie Sanders says the quiet part out loud. | What Now? With Trevor Noah
25 votes -
YouTube capitulates to US President Donald Trump
27 votes -
Why I stopped being anti-woke
12 votes -
Denmark has announced $4.2bn of extra defence spending to boost security in the Arctic and North Atlantic regions, including Greenland
10 votes -
US Immigration and Customs Enforcement bought vehicles equipped with fake cell towers to spy on phones
16 votes -
Myanmar activists to sue Norway's Telenor for handing data to military – claimants say government used data to track and target activists in the wake of 2021 coup
6 votes -
Gen-Z protests are spreading globally. What's driving this youth-led movement?
22 votes -
Fire at South Korean government building causes nationwide outages
14 votes -
‘Total internet blackout’ in Afghanistan sparks panic after Taliban vowed to stamp out immoral activities
12 votes -
US President Donald Trump shares seemingly AI video amplifying 'medbed' conspiracy theory
25 votes -
Russia-NATO confrontation - drones over Poland and MiGs over the Baltic
11 votes -
The US school shooting industry is worth billions — and it keeps growing
31 votes -
From burner phones to decks of cards: New York City teens are adjusting to the smartphone ban
13 votes -
Protest at Austin City Hall after not being allowed to speak [at hearing on surveillance cameras]
33 votes -
What a WiFi ban cost this West Virginia school
11 votes -
Denmark ending letter deliveries is a sign of the digital times
19 votes -
Russian hackers took control of a Norwegian dam this year, opening a floodgate and allowing water to flow unnoticed for four hours, Norway's intelligence service has said
24 votes -
How the right shaped the debate over the Sydney Sweeney ads
14 votes -
Denmark has been a stalwart supporter of image scanning and chat control to detect child sex abuse material. Now, they hold the keys to make it a reality.
14 votes -
What we owe one another: the political economy of open source (FOSS4GNA 2023)
2 votes -
UK's Online Safety Act is exactly the obvious failure predicted
30 votes -
Swedish prime minister, Ulf Kristersson, has come under fire after admitting that he regularly consults AI tools for a second opinion in his role running the country
16 votes -
“It's our hope”: Former YouTuber MatPat launches creator economy caucus
7 votes -
Everyone is crazy now
19 votes -
Computational tyranny
10 votes -
Fascism for first time founders
16 votes -
Nick Fuentes breaks with US President Donald Trump and MAGA over Jeffrey Epstein
19 votes -
An “anti-government militia” called ‘Veterans on Patrol’ is “targeting” Oklahoma weather radars because they believe the radars control the weather
34 votes -
Social media can support or undermine democracy — it comes down to how it’s designed
11 votes -
What can we learn from Estonia?
12 votes -
Mass tech layoffs from 2022 onward linked to US tax code change by first Donald Trump administration
45 votes -
1-1 political conversations to help mend the political divide
13 votes -
Crypto's new bailout fund: your savings account
24 votes -
Bill Gates to give most of his $200bn fortune to Africa
22 votes -
Donald Trump taps Palantir to create master database on every American
43 votes -
EU is proposing far-reaching data retention laws and is asking for feedback
37 votes -
US President Donald Trump threatens 50% tariffs on EU and 25% penalties on Apple as his trade war intensifies
25 votes -
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau quietly kills rule to shield Americans from data brokers
16 votes -
US Republican Party sneaks decade-long AI regulation ban into spending bill
21 votes