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:blobcatlaptop: gravitos :blobcatcomfsip:​

差分描くのめちゃくちゃ楽しい​:blobcatrainbow:​
ちゃんと合体させられるかは未知数だけど!

:blobcatlaptop: gravitos :blobcatcomfsip:​

#Роскомнадзор получил право управлять сетями всех провайдеров в стране.

Иными словами, если провайдер не сможет или не захочет удалять какой-то контент, то РКН имеет право «захватить» сеть оператора и рулить ей, как вздумается. Самое жуткое, что РКН может даже не сообщать об этом — потому что «секретная информация». 🤷‍♂️

Чебурнет начинается сегодня. :gnomeHey:

@rf @ru

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Григорий Клюшников

Ну вот уж это точно поможет защитить детей от информации, которая может испортить им психику.

fedorkin

@rf @ru Там еще Тг-каналы и Ютуберов с > 10 000 подписчиками обязали передавать данные в #РКН

3dnews.ru/1108667/youtubekanal

mcstar

@fedorkin @rf @ru а как управлять? Им какие-то доступы дадут?

:blobcatlaptop: gravitos :blobcatcomfsip:​

My wife told me to take the spider out instead of killing him.

Went out. Had a few drinks. Nice guy. He's a web designer.

Specialises in debugging.

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Corvus

@davep laugh of the day. And yes, the debugging line added a lot.

Funky Bob

@davep I love that every time this joke resurfaces, it's grown a little, become just a bit funnier :)

Walnut
@davep
I have a couple itty bitty spiders that chill in the corner (whole body with legs is around the size of my fingernail). They do a pretty good job of pest control; every now and again I clean up old cobwebs in the corner and their pile of fruit fly and mosquito husks. I like my corner spiders
:blobcatlaptop: gravitos :blobcatcomfsip:​

The constant disappointment of devices like smartphones, for me, is that having a permanently-internet-connected computer full of sensors that I keep on me at all times should be a thing that I can treat as an assistive tool that is integrated into my sense of self, constantly taking in information, processing that in workflows I've created, and sharing that with me

in other words, it should be a programmable extension of the perception of the body

and the entire ecosystem around smart phones is very meant for Not That

The constant disappointment of devices like smartphones, for me, is that having a permanently-internet-connected computer full of sensors that I keep on me at all times should be a thing that I can treat as an assistive tool that is integrated into my sense of self, constantly taking in information, processing that in workflows I've created, and sharing that with me

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bricks

@left_adjoint I highly recommend reading Robert Ludlum’s book “The Utopia Experiment” first, then re-evaluate your wishes. It was published in 2014, but today’s tech news constantly remind me of this extraordinary tech thriller.

skry

@left_adjoint @hypebot Half the time I’m not even sure it’s on my side.

Grey the earthling

@left_adjoint Yeah. The device is perfectly capable of being that, but then capitalism intervenes.

I think we're *almost* reaching the point where #LinuxMobile is becoming an attractive non-hostile alternative for people who would otherwise choose a non-smart phone.

Give it a few years, and I think a phone pre-installed with #postmarketOS would work well enough for tech-unenthusiasts to actually like it.

(🐧 Posted from my Linux phone)

:blobcatlaptop: gravitos :blobcatcomfsip:​

на этом месте разбились чьи-то детские мечты

:blobcatlaptop: gravitos :blobcatcomfsip:​

Отлично я нагулялась, однако!
Раннеутренний Питер такой красивый, аж бесит 😃

:blobcatlaptop: gravitos :blobcatcomfsip:​

Друзья, я заметила, что в феди очень молодая аудитория, и для меня это кстати, удивительно)
Стало интересно узнать, кто мои соседи в этой соцсети, какая возрастная группа вообще:)
Сделайте пуньк в голосовании и передайте голосовалку дальше😀
По желанию можете еще написать в комментариях о себе, на комментаторов подпишусь, в целях расширения ленты и взглядов💖

Anonymous poll

Poll

До 16 лет
7
5.4%
16-25 лет
38
29.2%
25-35лет
43
33.1%
35+ лет
42
32.3%
130 people voted.
Voting ended 29 July at 9:01.
Show previous comments
MrClon

@ponaekhala пару лет назад был большой опрос (кажется в англофеди) на это счёт. Там лидировали 30+ (как и тут, пока). И как по мне как раз это удивительно. По идее молодёжь должна активнее бросаться на всё новое

Eugene

@ponaekhala судя по голосованию, аудитория не такая уж и молодая 🙂 . Мне кажется, что тут в основном олды, которые использовали старый твиттер/juick и пересели на альтернативу в лице Mastodon, вместо X/Bluesky/Threads

:blobcatlaptop: gravitos :blobcatcomfsip:​

иногда я жалею о том, что все мои знакомые - программисты, информатики, компьютерщики и так далее, и ни одного психолога.

[DATA EXPUNGED]
ZD915

@gravitos дешевле диплома психолога продают только дипломы филолога.

У меня было довольно много знакомых психологинь. Выбирать можно было только из двух опций. Слегка ебанутые, и пиздец как на всю голову угашенные.

В профессии оставались те, кто овладевал наукой молчать.

Короче, не переживай. Тебе просто повезло.

:blobcatlaptop: gravitos :blobcatcomfsip:​

Facts about hardware are not copyrightable.

People tend to ascribe magical properties to copyright, as if any kind of information whatsoever is copyrightable. That's not how it works.

Copyright is intended to protect creative works. Hardware devices are not considered creative devices, they are functional. They are protected by patent rights, not copyright – and patent rights only protect the ability to reproduce the device, not describe it.

This means that PCB layouts are not copyrightable. By extension, nor are circuit netlists (i.e. the "information" within a circuit schematic). (Yes, this has interesting implications for open source hardware! You can attach licenses all you want to OSHW, but they only protect the actual source design files - anyone can just copy the functional design manually and manufacture copies and ignore the license, as long as they change the name to not run into trademark issues/etc., any firmware notwithstanding)

IC masks are protected under a very explicit law in the US. They weren't before that. By extension, nothing else about the chip design other than possibly firmware is copyrightable.

If you go and make an x86 clone or an unlicensed ARM core, Intel and ARM won't go after you for copyright violation. They will go after you for patent infringement, because the ISAs are patented. Talking about the architectures and writing code for them and any other research is perfectly fine. The only thing you can't do is reimplement them.

This is why projects like Asahi Linux can exist. If somehow just knowing how hardware works were a potential copyright violation, none of this would be possible.

What this means is: it is entirely legitimate to inspect things like vendor tools and software to learn things about the hardware, and then transfer that knowledge over to FOSS. You may run into license/EULA issues depending on what you do with the source data specifically (think: "no reverse engineering" type provisions), but as far as the knowledge contained within is concerned, that is not copyrightable, and the manufacturer has no copyright claim over the resulting FOSS.

This includes copying register names. I have an actual lawyer's opinion on that (via @bunnie). I tend to rewrite vendor register names more often than not anyway because often they are terrible, but I'm not legally required to.

The reason why we don't just go and throw vendor drivers into Ghidra and decompile all day, besides the EULA implications for the person doing it, is that the code is copyrightable and it can become a legal liability if you end up writing code that drives the hardware the same way, including in aspects that are deemed creative and copyrightable. This is why we have things like the clean-room approach and why we prefer things like hardware access tracing over decompilation.

But stuff like register names and pure facts about the hardware like that? Totally fair game.

Fun fact: Vendor documentation, like the ARM Architecture Reference Manual, has no copyright release for this stuff in the license. If register names were copyrightable, then anyone who has ever read ARM docs and copied and pasted a reg name into their code would be infringing copyright. They aren't, because this stuff isn't copyrightable.

Facts about hardware are not copyrightable.

People tend to ascribe magical properties to copyright, as if any kind of information whatsoever is copyrightable. That's not how it works.

Copyright is intended to protect creative works. Hardware devices are not considered creative devices, they are functional. They are protected by patent rights, not copyright – and patent rights only protect the ability to reproduce the device, not describe it.

Exa :calim:

@marcan I wonder how this stands in Europe and other countries. In France we got different rights from author laws than in the US, that are more protective I'd say.

:blobcatlaptop: gravitos :blobcatcomfsip:​

Anyone who says Linux is difficult to use, annoying, or requires a lot of user time and input to work needs to watch the latest video from @snazzyq.

Just seeing the amount of pop-ups, updates, issues, and hoops you need to jump through to use a new Windows PC is insane (granted, some issues in the video are because it’s an ARM PC, but most of the annoying interactions aren’t dependent on that).

As Quinn says, it’s likely faster to install Arch than to setup a new Windows PC…

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Zoidberg For President

@thelinuxEXP @snazzyq So Linux IS difficult to use, annoying, or requires a lot of user time and input to work... just not as much as a recent Windows?

Pretty poor argument there sorry to say...

Arcticulate

@thelinuxEXP @snazzyq Well, key to offering a great user experience is 1) Tight hardware & software integration 2) Well-planned, solid OS foundation

1: Microsoft makes the OS, Qualcomm cooperates with Microsoft to optimise that OS for Qualcomm’s next-gen aarch64-based SoCs. It’s not ideal, less control, but (open source!) Android pulled it off and Windows can, too.

2: Why Windows is ready for ARM: Microsoft’s earlier big efforts with Win10 ”Core OS”, WP8/WM10 and WinRT.

nicholas

@thelinuxEXP@mastodon.social @snazzyq@mas.to arch install speedrun when (actually that probably already exists)

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