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35 votes
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More than 140 Kenya Facebook moderators diagnosed with severe PTSD
18 votes -
CCTV cameras are everywhere — and they’re changing how your brain responds
7 votes -
Study: essay graders rarely detect AI, give higher grades
22 votes -
Contempt culture and its currency
36 votes -
Beyond Borgmann: Single-task tools and the future of meaningful technology
7 votes -
Sweden's government considering imposing age limits on social media platforms if tech companies find themselves unable to prevent gangs from recruiting young people online
20 votes -
Kagi Small Web
39 votes -
OpenAI whistleblower found dead in San Francisco apartment. Suchir Balaji, 26, claimed the company broke copyright law.
35 votes -
Do you need a VPN?
13 votes -
Microsoft says having a TPM is "non-negotiable" for Windows 11
31 votes -
Podcast app recs
Title is pretty straightforward I think. Trying to get my Podcast listening off of Spotify because I just hate their player and UX lately. Also, no ability to add feeds by RSS link. My daily...
Title is pretty straightforward I think.
Trying to get my Podcast listening off of Spotify because I just hate their player and UX lately. Also, no ability to add feeds by RSS link.
My daily drivers I spend most of my time on are my iPhone and Macbook Pro. After that, maybe I would listen on my iPad, or my PC that is running both Linux and Windows.
6 votes -
US officials urge Americans to use encrypted apps amid unprecedented cyberattack
50 votes -
BuzzFeed sold 'Hot Ones' studio for $82.5 million to consortium including First We Feast's founder, host Sean Evans, Crooked Media, Mythical Entertainment, and Soros Fund Management.
15 votes -
Chatbots urged teen to self-harm, suggested murdering parents, Texas lawsuit says
24 votes -
What do you use for 2fa?
This Lifehacker article recommending Ente Auth reminded me that I am looking to migrate off Authy to something else. I thought I would see what Tilderinos are using: What do you use, and do you...
This Lifehacker article recommending Ente Auth reminded me that I am looking to migrate off Authy to something else.
I thought I would see what Tilderinos are using:
- What do you use, and do you like it?
- How do you deal with syncing?
- Do you only generate codes on your phone, or do you use a desktop app too?
- What questions should I be asking that I didn't ask?
18 votes -
Norwegian payment service Vipps becomes world's first company to launch competing tap-to-pay solution to Apple Pay on iPhone – follows agreement with European regulators
17 votes -
Tom Merritt's opinion on if Mozilla should join Chromium
10 votes -
Funko Pop causes takedown of itch.io, calls the owner's mom
54 votes -
From where I left off (antirez returns to Redis)
6 votes -
iPhone music players with good CarPlay experience?
I’m about to take a road trip and I want to be able to easily play my music and it would be a huge pain to do this with iTunes. I’ve got VLC but the UI leaves much to be desired. I can’t even view...
I’m about to take a road trip and I want to be able to easily play my music and it would be a huge pain to do this with iTunes. I’ve got VLC but the UI leaves much to be desired. I can’t even view my music by album in CarPlay, which is how I’m going to be accessing my music. There are tons of music playing apps out there but they are all varying degrees of sketchy. Does anyone have any recommendations?
11 votes -
AI slop is already invading Oregon’s local journalism
16 votes -
Are ‘ghost engineers’ real? Seeking Silicon Valley’s least productive coders.
23 votes -
New website shows you how much Google AI can learn from your photos
31 votes -
Lies I was told about collaborative editing, Part 1: Algorithms for offline editing
14 votes -
Do not buy NZXT | Predatory, evil rental computer scam investigated
62 votes -
The confusing reality of AI friends
20 votes -
Introducing ChatGPT Pro
21 votes -
Tips for increasing online privacy (without going insane)?
I've been researching internet privacy and fell down the rabbit hole of...well, internet privacy. I started with deleting Facebook/Instagram and switching to fire fox + plugins. I would like to...
I've been researching internet privacy and fell down the rabbit hole of...well, internet privacy. I started with deleting Facebook/Instagram and switching to fire fox + plugins. I would like to make more improvements but I really have no idea how, it started with deleting socials and next thing you know I'm looking at LineageOS and de-googling.
If anyone has any suggestions on where to go next while staying realistic/not going crazy, i would love to hear them. I am not really sure where to set my expectations, basically I would like to have more control of my data. The other day Google photos gave me a memory recap which kind of creeped me out! I am suddenly not fond of whatever is going on under the surface of Google photos that's making collages and trying to sell my photo books. Also g-board giving me a pop up in the text prediction row asking me to rate the app??? Ew.
I am a fan of self hosting and run a small NAS (open media vault) but this too quickly turns into the privacy spiral and leaves me thinking I should throw my phone into a river and live in the forest. Would love to hear your thoughts/advice/opinions!
54 votes -
A freeze dryer is not a reasonable purchase
61 votes -
AI is making Philippine call center work more efficient, for better and worse
11 votes -
Social media algorithms can change your views in just a single day
16 votes -
Recommendations about which Android texting app to use?
Could someone please recommend a text messaging app for Android that is reasonably secure? Verizon is discontinuing their native texting (SMS) app. They recommend switching to Google Messages, but...
Could someone please recommend a text messaging app for Android that is reasonably secure?
Verizon is discontinuing their native texting (SMS) app. They recommend switching to Google Messages, but I would not like Google to have access to my entire text messaging history. I tried Signal, but my old messages don't transfer over (minor problem), and almost none of my family are willing to switch to Signal (big problem). When I search for advice, I get a bunch of AI slop articles and advertisements. So I figured I might have better luck asking here: Is there any text messaging app for Android that works well and isn't going to hoover up all my data?
16 votes -
Australia’s social media ban and why it's not cut and dry
Australia’s proposed social media ban is deeply concerning and authoritarian. It's disturbing to see how much of the general public supports this measure. Prominent organizations, including...
Australia’s proposed social media ban is deeply concerning and authoritarian. It's disturbing to see how much of the general public supports this measure.
Prominent organizations, including Amnesty International, the Australian Human Rights Commission, and Electronic Frontiers Australia, have voiced significant concerns about this legislation:
Amnesty International's Explanation of the Social Media Ban
Australian Human Rights Commission on the Proposed Social Media Ban for Under-16s
EFA's Critique of the Social Media Age BanAustralia has a troubling history with internet legislation. Noteworthy examples include the Australian Internet Firewall under Stephen Conroy and Malcolm Turnbull's infamous statement, "The laws of mathematics are very commendable, but the only law that applies in Australia is the law of Australia," regarding encryption backdoors.
While I recognize the issues with social media, "don't feed the trolls," along with maintaining online anonymity and implementing parental controls ( no phones with unfettered internet access ), should work. This law indiscriminately punishes all Australians for the missteps of a few, potentially leading to increased identity theft through phone and email scams and causing older family who are not tech literate to lose connections with their families due to the complexities of government-issued tokens.
Adults will be the ones who are going to be most impacted by this legislation.
The scope of this law is extensive. The Online Safety website suggests that this is merely the beginning, with plans to cover the entire web, including games, adult content, and more. The consequences are profound: the erosion of true anonymity and increased risk to government whistle-blowers and journalistic sources.
Requiring individuals to provide their identity to a third party to access the internet, which many have used freely for decades, is alarming. It threatens to sanitize search results and revoke access to purchased games if users refuse additional identity verification measures. There are no grandfathered exceptions, highlighting the law's intent to de-anonymize the internet.
Although Australia lacks a constitutionally protected right to free speech, this law poses significant risks to whistleblowers and marginalized youth in remote communities. Instead of banning access and creating allure through prohibition, we should address the root causes of why younger people are drawn to such content.
Once entrenched in law, any opposition will be met with accusations of perversion or indifference to child safety, compounded by the spread of misinformation. We must critically assess and address these laws to protect our freedoms and privacy.
There wouldn't be speculation if they defined how they intend the law to work. Instead of a "don't worry about it we will work it out", give people something to say that's not so bad and I can live with it
15 votes -
You should have a website
37 votes -
blogroll.club - A blog directory
15 votes -
I just acquired a Samsung phone. Is there an operational benefit to registering it with Samsung?
My previous phone was a pixel. My tech life generally is a weird mix of things that are bad for privacy that I accept for convenience but also in other ways I choose to sacrifice things to protect...
My previous phone was a pixel. My tech life generally is a weird mix of things that are bad for privacy that I accept for convenience but also in other ways I choose to sacrifice things to protect privacy.
Does not registering the phone with Samsung actually cost me any functionality as a user?
11 votes -
100 Days To Offload
6 votes -
Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger forced out by board frustrated with slow progress
26 votes -
Mozilla begs courts to allow Google search deal for Firefox to continue
59 votes -
Why is the iOS dialer so terrible?
I'm open to hearing from folks who have used iOS longer than me. How is the iOS dialer so terrible when it's supposed to be the primary usage of a phone, calling people? Why can't I type the...
I'm open to hearing from folks who have used iOS longer than me. How is the iOS dialer so terrible when it's supposed to be the primary usage of a phone, calling people?
- Why can't I type the letters of a name in my contacts list, eg "5-2-6" for "JAM" and have all the "James" show up? Android has had that since forever because it's not rocket science.
- Why can't I type to correct a digit in the middle of the number dialed? Or correct a number I've pasted in?
- Seriously, is there no way to replace the dialer with something better? And if there is and I just missed it, what are your recommendations?
- Same question for the god-awful contacts list. I use Google Contacts, have 3 google accounts in which the contacts are… and the syncing seems piss-poor.
Ok, this turned out to be more of a rant than I anticipated. I've gotten to like iOS quite a bit, especially because the android ecosystem has become a very "worst of both worlds" option. But man the dialer's shit. Someone please tell me I'm missing something obvious.
34 votes -
CrowdStrike avoids customer exodus after triggering global IT outage
24 votes -
Australian Parliament bans social media for under-16s with world-first law
61 votes -
Someone made a dataset of one million Bluesky posts for 'machine learning research'
20 votes -
European Federation of Journalists to stop posting content on X
33 votes -
How to be a wise optimist about science and technology?
7 votes -
Elon Musk asks court to block OpenAI from converting to a for-profit corporation
13 votes -
What are the cons of Google being forced to give up its control of Chrome?
Seeing the courts go after Google's monopoly and the unintended consequences to Mozilla (and therefore Firefox) that can happen if the courts make it illegal for Google to pay to be the default...
Seeing the courts go after Google's monopoly and the unintended consequences to Mozilla (and therefore Firefox) that can happen if the courts make it illegal for Google to pay to be the default search engine, it goes me thinking about Chrome/Chromium.
I know that the courts are trying to force Google to give up its control of Chrome (I don't even know how that is possible for the government to tell a tech company that it is not allowed to develop a tech product it created itself) but it seems to me that Google maintaining Chrome is not really a problem in and of itself. there are many browsers available to folks and if you as a user want to be completely plugged into the google ecosystem at the detriment of your online privacy, that is your choice to make.
the real issue seems to me that a user should have the exact same experience browsing a google website on chrome vs an alternative.
But that made me wonder if (like stopping Google being able to pay to be the default search engine) Google was forced to give up its control of Chrome, what are the possible negative consequences of that to users? and would forcing Google to instead relinquish its control of chromium alleviate those issues?
28 votes -
Starlink Direct to Cell
25 votes -
Forced to upgrade [from iPhone 8]
16 votes