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8 votes
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Branding the Decentralized Web
6 votes -
San Francisco says it will use AI to reduce bias when charging people with crimes
11 votes -
YouTube without all the crap?
I'm a pretty regular YouTube watcher but if I accidentally glance down at the comments section, I know my night is going to be ruined. I wondered if there is any kind of YouTube app or service...
I'm a pretty regular YouTube watcher but if I accidentally glance down at the comments section, I know my night is going to be ruined.
I wondered if there is any kind of YouTube app or service that lets you watch and search for videos (even access my subscribed channels) but with less of the crap, ie. the comments and related videos, which just take you down a YouTube rabbit hole that you won't get out of for hours.
Cheers!
19 votes -
DJI’s newest drone is a $499 tank meant to teach kids how to code
4 votes -
Plausible deniability and gaslighting in fighting ad blockers
24 votes -
Microsoft Alternatives project (MAlt) - Taking back control using open software
10 votes -
The experience of working on a thirty-year-old Macintosh SE
6 votes -
Fan fiction writers are better than tech at organizing information online
12 votes -
Web Request and Declarative Net Request: Explaining the impact on Extensions in Manifest V3
7 votes -
Maine Governor signs strictest internet protections in the US
8 votes -
Opera, Brave, Vivaldi to ignore Chrome's anti-ad-blocker changes, despite shared codebase
37 votes -
Diminishing differentiation: Are all our gadgets making each other redundant?
15 votes -
Firefox: The evolution of a brand
13 votes -
Dropbox's desktop app is becoming a "workspace" with organization and collaboration tools, including integrations with Slack, Zoom, and Atlassian
7 votes -
Introducing Study from Facebook
14 votes -
'RAMBleed' Rowhammer attack can now steal data, not just alter it
7 votes -
Chrome Incognito mode no longer detectable in Chrome 76
@paul_irish: Chrome Incognito mode has been detectable for years, due to the FileSystem API implementation. As of Chrome 76, this is fixed. Apologies to the "detect private mode" scripts out there. 💐
17 votes -
Tech and antitrust
5 votes -
The mysterious and potentially revolutionary Celera 500L aircraft may fly soon
9 votes -
Adopting Kubernetes? These guidelines make the transition easier.
5 votes -
France bans judge analytics, five years in prison for rule breakers
9 votes -
GitHub shocks top developer: Access to five years' work inexplicably blocked
24 votes -
Big mood machine - Spotify pursues emotional surveillance for global profit
12 votes -
InfoWars agrees to pay Pepe the Frog creator $15,000 in copyright settlement
25 votes -
Huawei is sending developers requests to publish on its app store
8 votes -
Huawei’s export ban is wider in scope than most people imagine
6 votes -
Inside a PCB soldering factory in China
7 votes -
Walmart wants employees to deliver products to your fridge - Available in three cities this fall
11 votes -
Salesforce Acquires Tableau Software in $15.7 Billion Deal
10 votes -
Google argues the Huawei ban would hurt its Android monopoly
6 votes -
Ring is using its customers’ doorbell camera video for ads. It says it's allowed to.
18 votes -
Apple plans to force app developers using OAuth to include their sign in and encourages them to put it above rivals.
11 votes -
YouTube just banned supremacist content, and thousands of channels are about to be removed
14 votes -
A state-of-the-art defense against neural fake news
6 votes -
iOS 13 now shows you a map of where apps have been tracking you
13 votes -
Ars Technica reporter Peter Bright charged with soliciting child sex online
13 votes -
The tricky ethics of using YouTube videos for academic research
6 votes -
How the pursuit of leisure drives internet use: The second half of humanity is joining the internet
4 votes -
How Twitter needs to change | Jack Dorsey
11 votes -
Facebook suspends app pre-installs on Huawei phones
9 votes -
Barack and Michelle Obama sign Spotify deal to produce exclusive podcasts
4 votes -
People of Tildes, what apps and programs do you use regularly on your PC?
I'm interested in what applications people use, maybe I can discover some better alternatives. Music: Spotify for streaming, Dopamine for local music. Cloud: OneDrive. As a student, I get 1 TB of...
I'm interested in what applications people use, maybe I can discover some better alternatives.
Music: Spotify for streaming, Dopamine for local music.
Cloud: OneDrive. As a student, I get 1 TB of space for free.
Email: Mailspring, though I'm eyeing eM Client as an alternative right now.
Text Processors: Mostly VS Code with LaTeX, but I do sometimes use good old MS Office.
Code: VS Code again, and also IntelliJ IDEA and CLion for the respective languages. VS Code for anything that isn't C or Java related. I'm also watching the development of Oni Vim 2.
PDF: On my laptop with a touch display, I use Drawboard. On my PC at home I use Nitro PDF.
Browser: Firefox, ever since the quantum update it's nice and snappy. Though maybe I'd switch to Vivaldi when they add Sync at some point.
48 votes -
Behind the scenes with the hacktivists who took on Microsoft and the FBI
4 votes -
2019 Macbook Pro review by Dave Lee
17 votes -
'It's time for us to watch them': App lets you spy on Alexa and the rest of your smart devices
11 votes -
Tech giants amass a lobbying army for an epic Washington battle
10 votes -
Survival of the richest. The wealthy are plotting to leave us behind.
16 votes -
Twitterbots: Anatomy of a Propaganda Campaign
7 votes -
Break up Big Tech
3 votes