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6 posts total
Meg

It's kind of weird that over the next couple of decades, the stereotype of "grandparents don't know how to use computers" is going to have to give way to "grandparents remember when computers worked at all and won't shut up about it."

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Badri
@megmac I can totally see myself becoming those grandparents 🫠
Nixie

@megmac Grandparents have 3D printed the save icon.

Pandoria Falls

@megmac or "grandparents actually know how to properly use a computer for more than just a web browser and can set it up and fix it on their own."
I see that in my younger sister (10 years age gap) already. She doesn't know how to handle a computer like I do.

Meg

I'd go a step further: if something has no commercial value, preventing people from using, sharing, modifying, or expressing it should be illegal.

Not just copyrighted things. Also any DRM protecting something no longer for sale or that doesn't receive updates or support.

Locked bootloader on a ten year old phone? Illegal. Locked down jtag pins and bootrom on an always-online device after the services are turned down? Illegal. Class action suits up the wazoo.

It should be illegal to withhold from the commons.

https://kolektiva.social/users/psychoalpastor/statuses/110975866059142715

I'd go a step further: if something has no commercial value, preventing people from using, sharing, modifying, or expressing it should be illegal.

Not just copyrighted things. Also any DRM protecting something no longer for sale or that doesn't receive updates or support.

Locked bootloader on a ten year old phone? Illegal. Locked down jtag pins and bootrom on an always-online device after the services are turned down? Illegal. Class action suits up the wazoo.

Jean-Baptiste "JBQ" Quéru

@megmac I'm hoping that the EU push toward improving cybersecurity and reducing e-waste opens the door toward a situation where requirements are tighter for closed systems. Open a system fully (source code, tools, signature keys, etc...) and, after a year, active maintenance isn't legally required any more.

Meg

The fediverse was never going to be a hockey stick. In the end it's more like a katamari. Picking up people left behind by the corporate internet into a messy ass ball that grows in fits and starts, but can keep on rolling past obstacles that closed systems can't.

Its lack of clearly defined shape is at once its greatest strength and its greatest weakness.

Owen Nelson

@megmac I love this since all the people swept up in a Katamari roll are experiencing raw terror like they are in one of those Bosch depictions of hell.

Meg

I suspect (and please note that this is really difficult to prove so it's just, like, my onionman) that through the explosive commoditization of software over the last 20 years we've all learned a kind of helpless adversarialism in our interactions with computers.

Because we don't control them! We have to fight tooth and nail for every affordance. So we either frame everything as a demand, or we just.. give up and live with spending our whole lives in a panopticon. There's no middle ground because outrage is our only leverage.

One of the reasons I'm here at all, and not in the online equivalent of a cabin in the woods, is that this silly fediverse thing is probably the closest we've ever come to pushing back on that in a way that can be appealing to the mainstream.

And you might scoff at that, because it's really popular to pretend that only nerds live here, but really: nothing like this has ever achieved even half of what this has so far. Nothing like this has ever been a viable alternative to corporate-run media for anyone not well versed in technology, except maybe bittorent.

It's fucking messy, but it's messy like humans instead of messy like corporations. I think we can fix human-scale problems, I don't think we even have a seat at the table to fixing corporate ones.

https://hackers.town/users/calcifer/statuses/110531948483085056

I suspect (and please note that this is really difficult to prove so it's just, like, my onionman) that through the explosive commoditization of software over the last 20 years we've all learned a kind of helpless adversarialism in our interactions with computers.

Because we don't control them! We have to fight tooth and nail for every affordance. So we either frame everything as a demand, or we just.. give up and live with spending our whole lives in a panopticon. There's no middle ground because...

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Richard Hendricks

@megmac Saving Onionman as a new word for the autocorrect. 🙂

Red

@megmac I haven't been here long but I like what I see so far. This dates me a bit but it reminds me of things like IRC - a bunch of independent groups/servers that just chose to connect and collaborate. There was no one body controlling content or deciding what the community was. Communities decided for themselves and if they didn't get along they just didn't talk to each other.

Meg

Are there any microbloggy #activitypub implementations out there that *aren't* trying to maintain some level of compatibility with the mastodon client API?

Meg

"federation doesn't scale! It's impossible!" I say on the world wide network of networks that's built up of thousands and thousands of individual operators interoperating over a suite of standard protocols.

Andrew Yourtchenko

@megmac internet is more or less a fediverse that mostly runs on beer (and some money here and there) :)

Edit: whereby I always uncontrollably giggle when the crypto bros brag about the bitcon and other projects surviving the collapse of the civilization :)

SteveK🏳️‍🌈

@megmac Yeah - there are currently only about 74,000 Autonomous System Networks, announcing over 938,000 routed networks, containing millions of independently managed subnets. How could you possibly scale a few thousand hosts?

CoolOwl

@megmac SMTP would seem like a simple counterexample; it seems to have scaled quite splendidly.

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