You can't use Oculus products now without a Facebook account?
The frustration is fair and understandable, but his characterization of Rust is wrong IMO. Side note, has anyone read a Java textbook? They are notable for not being able to go more than a page without extolling Java's…
hmmm, this is your desktop or a server?
It was a pun on "What's cracking?"
It was a joke, like "What's cracking?"
> I recognize they have a right to do it, but I have a right to make noise about it and criticize them. Nobody suggested otherwise, and your statement that "you're not interested in free speech unless you're willing to…
Don't be ridiculous. There are thousands of competing communications providers. If you want to share content that harms society or harms the platforms themselves then you might just have to do it outside of Facebook or…
> A domain and VPS are simply not a viable substitute for access to mainstream social networks; to claim otherwise is disingenuous. Nobody is claiming this. That's the whole idea of the "Freedom of reach" thing... Why…
It's not a non sequitur. Freedom of speech is not the same thing as a (nonexistent) right to post whatever you want on a private platform regardless of the consequences for others or for the platform itself. I never…
So newspapers should be compelled to print every letter they receive?
They're private platforms. You can send those links via many other routes which would be legally protected speech.
They're not banning all allegations of fraud. They're blocking a specific set of claims that have been shown to be false, for instance that Donald Trump won the 2020 US election.
> IMHO you're not interested in free speech unless you're willing to defend speech you find repugnant. Defending speech I find repugnant is not the same thing as defending a nonexistent right to post lies on Youtube.…
> “A group of unknown people at a technology corporation should be the ultimate authority on what I’m allowed to say, read, or share with my friends.” Literally nobody is suggesting this. It's about freedom of Reach,…
No, you're misinformed. The (Federal) Supreme Court rejected the Pennsylvania case unanimously.
Ah, my bad. The REFERENCE implementation, written in Python, which was supposed to be supplanted by a faster, better implementation years ago, now has 10x less bugs.
> Sorry, you're complaining that we... did the thing you want us to do? But it took longer than you wanted? My heart bleeds. Wasn't complaining. I don't use Matrix. > Meanwhile, portable identities are also in active…
> Also isn't E2EE new to Matrix? It was turned on by default in May of 2020. It was available before then. > I don't have any fear of Moxie turning and pushing backdoor keys into everyone's app. He could, though, and…
It's not decentralized because it's federated, client-server chat software. This is more decentralized than Discord or what-have-you, but it requires reliance on multiple centralized internet services and authorities,…
> Why is it not possible for GNUnet to / why doesn't GNUnet offer a high-level API that could be consumed by every-day apps and that stays stable across releases? This isn't possible because GNUnet does not work, and…
A lot of Linux-y people, including myself, reject Matrix. It's not the solution it claims to be. I could write a list of criticisms of Matrix's software products, organization, and track record, but the main problem is…
You said "they all spy", implying generic Linux. You have been called out for multiple falsehoods in your comments here and you've still failed to provide any evidence.
Linux operating systems don't spy on their users. This is false. Stop repeating misinformation. The Ubuntu Amazon fiasco is, if anything, evidence of extreme resistance to this kind of thing. The Linux community…
This is a lie.
So... No, this has never happened on Ubuntu.
You can't use Oculus products now without a Facebook account?
The frustration is fair and understandable, but his characterization of Rust is wrong IMO. Side note, has anyone read a Java textbook? They are notable for not being able to go more than a page without extolling Java's…
hmmm, this is your desktop or a server?
It was a pun on "What's cracking?"
It was a joke, like "What's cracking?"
> I recognize they have a right to do it, but I have a right to make noise about it and criticize them. Nobody suggested otherwise, and your statement that "you're not interested in free speech unless you're willing to…
Don't be ridiculous. There are thousands of competing communications providers. If you want to share content that harms society or harms the platforms themselves then you might just have to do it outside of Facebook or…
> A domain and VPS are simply not a viable substitute for access to mainstream social networks; to claim otherwise is disingenuous. Nobody is claiming this. That's the whole idea of the "Freedom of reach" thing... Why…
It's not a non sequitur. Freedom of speech is not the same thing as a (nonexistent) right to post whatever you want on a private platform regardless of the consequences for others or for the platform itself. I never…
So newspapers should be compelled to print every letter they receive?
They're private platforms. You can send those links via many other routes which would be legally protected speech.
They're not banning all allegations of fraud. They're blocking a specific set of claims that have been shown to be false, for instance that Donald Trump won the 2020 US election.
> IMHO you're not interested in free speech unless you're willing to defend speech you find repugnant. Defending speech I find repugnant is not the same thing as defending a nonexistent right to post lies on Youtube.…
> “A group of unknown people at a technology corporation should be the ultimate authority on what I’m allowed to say, read, or share with my friends.” Literally nobody is suggesting this. It's about freedom of Reach,…
No, you're misinformed. The (Federal) Supreme Court rejected the Pennsylvania case unanimously.
Ah, my bad. The REFERENCE implementation, written in Python, which was supposed to be supplanted by a faster, better implementation years ago, now has 10x less bugs.
> Sorry, you're complaining that we... did the thing you want us to do? But it took longer than you wanted? My heart bleeds. Wasn't complaining. I don't use Matrix. > Meanwhile, portable identities are also in active…
> Also isn't E2EE new to Matrix? It was turned on by default in May of 2020. It was available before then. > I don't have any fear of Moxie turning and pushing backdoor keys into everyone's app. He could, though, and…
It's not decentralized because it's federated, client-server chat software. This is more decentralized than Discord or what-have-you, but it requires reliance on multiple centralized internet services and authorities,…
> Why is it not possible for GNUnet to / why doesn't GNUnet offer a high-level API that could be consumed by every-day apps and that stays stable across releases? This isn't possible because GNUnet does not work, and…
A lot of Linux-y people, including myself, reject Matrix. It's not the solution it claims to be. I could write a list of criticisms of Matrix's software products, organization, and track record, but the main problem is…
You said "they all spy", implying generic Linux. You have been called out for multiple falsehoods in your comments here and you've still failed to provide any evidence.
Linux operating systems don't spy on their users. This is false. Stop repeating misinformation. The Ubuntu Amazon fiasco is, if anything, evidence of extreme resistance to this kind of thing. The Linux community…
This is a lie.
So... No, this has never happened on Ubuntu.