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4 votes
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Signal's server repo hasn't been updated since April 2020
26 votes -
Data Transfer Project
6 votes -
Gab removes their public Git repository after it reveals their developers adding (and struggling to fix) basic security issues that led to a 70GB data leak
12 votes -
Riff.cc, a torrent website for Creative Commons and free culture
Riff.cc is a private tracker torrent site that is completely focused on works distributed with creative commons, public domain, gpl or other free culture licenses. It has some plans to allow...
Riff.cc is a private tracker torrent site that is completely focused on works distributed with creative commons, public domain, gpl or other free culture licenses.
It has some plans to allow tipping creators and seeders using digital currency.You can use this invite to signup (I believe there is a limit of 90 people who can use it).
https://u.riff.cc/register/fb4dc3bf-af81-43f4-94fb-5afc6b24b159
17 votes -
The Great Suspender and the problem of malware being introduced into open-source browser extensions
15 votes -
PeerTube v3 : it’s a live, a liiiiive !
23 votes -
Open-source developer and manager David Recordon named White House Director of Technology
14 votes -
Linux for Apple Silicon effort kicks off
24 votes -
NewPipe: A FOSS alternative to classical YouTube
15 votes -
Pine64 December update: The longest one yet
4 votes -
RISC-V International reports another strong year of growth with new technical milestones, educational programs, RISC-V adoption and more
7 votes -
disroot.org (providers of hosted open source services) is getting his emails blocked by Microsoft and wants your help
13 votes -
Teddit: A privacy-friendly Reddit frontend similar to Invidious/Bibliogram/Nitter
18 votes -
Tool for adding trigger warnings to links
6 votes -
OpenStreetMap is having a moment; The billion dollar dataset next door
23 votes -
Librem 5 mass production phone has begun shipping
Announcement Details on the phone itself (Both are the same, the USA refers to supply chain): Libram 5 - $799 Libram 5 USA - $1999 I think it's quite a tell about how much our electronics are...
Details on the phone itself (Both are the same, the USA refers to supply chain):
Libram 5 - $799
Libram 5 USA - $1999I think it's quite a tell about how much our electronics are subsidized by sourcing from inordinately cheap labor compared to the (mostly) German/USA labor for the USA phone.
PureOS itself looks like it could be a decent entrant to breaking the mobile duopoly. The only sticking point for me would be various applications that don't offer browser options (read: 2 factor authentication apps).
12 votes -
Librem 5 mass production phone has begun shipping
9 votes -
JSHint: Watching the ship sink (A lesson on ambiguous licenses)
7 votes -
Guido van Rossum, the Python language's founder, joins Microsoft
13 votes -
Mobilizon, a free-libre federated events and groups platform has launched v1.0
13 votes -
Freetube rewrite with Newpipe-like local API released
7 votes -
Spritely - A project to improve the capabilities of the federated social web, from one of the co-authors of the ActivityPub standard
8 votes -
How open-source software transformed the business world
6 votes -
Where’s the Yelp for open-source tools?
12 votes -
Arm officially supports Panfrost Open-Source Mali GPU driver development
7 votes -
Canonical CEO Mark Shuttleworth makes peace with Ubuntu Linux community
11 votes -
What's new in the Linux kernel
14 votes -
Breaking up is hard to do: Chrome Web Browser separates from Chrome OS
11 votes -
Hive mind: In the early 2000s, there was a website that tracked and reviewed open source applications. What was it?
You could look up, say, CMSes, get some basic info about each one (to make useful decision), and learn who its active committers were. The site closed, I know. Do you remember its name? Or people...
You could look up, say, CMSes, get some basic info about each one (to make useful decision), and learn who its active committers were. The site closed, I know. Do you remember its name? Or people who were part of it?
I asked someone to write an article for me about "review sites for open source" -- think Yelp for Software -- and neither of us can remember its name. But if you have others that you think should be included (for positive or negative reasons), please let me know.
10 votes -
The Anti-Capitalist Software License has a goal of "contributing to a world beyond capitalism"
14 votes -
The main Invidious (YouTube frontend) instance is shutting down and Omar Roth is stepping down as project owner
22 votes -
Zulip 3.0 released: Open source, self-hostable, threaded team chat
12 votes -
GitHub Archive Program: The journey of the world’s open source code to the Arctic
6 votes -
Google offers free fabbing for 130nm open-source chips
17 votes -
WeCo - Cooperatively owned, democratically governed, open source social news
19 votes -
Plans for PeerTube v3 : global index, progressive fundraising, live streaming
16 votes -
Munich is shifting back from Microsoft to open source
14 votes -
Lemmy: A link aggregator/Reddit clone for the fediverse
15 votes -
The Beaker "new web" project
10 votes -
A state-of-the-art open source chatbot
12 votes -
Costs/funding in open-source languages
6 votes -
Inkscape 1.0 has been released - Free and open source vector graphics editor for GNU/Linux, Windows and MacOS X
21 votes -
Hyperdome - the safest place to reach out
5 votes -
BlackBerry says Chinese government hackers stole world's sensitive data for ten years
7 votes -
Ultimate Writer: An open digital typewriter
12 votes -
Envelope - Transform your phone into a simpler, calmer device
8 votes -
Trying out a Windows knock-off (ReactOS)
6 votes -
Libravatar - A free and open source alternative to Gravatar
8 votes -
Mycroft won against their patent troll
22 votes