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submitted 2 months ago by makeasnek@lemmy.ml to c/bitcoin@lemmy.ml

Meanwhile, Bitcoin hasn't had a single hack or a single hour of downtime since it started 15 years ago. Decentralization is the answer.

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submitted 2 months ago by makeasnek@lemmy.ml to c/cryptocurrency@lemmy.ml
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submitted 2 months ago by makeasnek@lemmy.ml to c/cryptocurrency@lemmy.ml

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/18184500

A fun website to track the "what if"

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submitted 2 months ago by makeasnek@lemmy.ml to c/bitcoin@lemmy.ml

A fun website to track the "what if"

[-] makeasnek@lemmy.ml 47 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Firefox user and evangelist of over a decade. Fuck Firefox for this.

[-] makeasnek@lemmy.ml 61 points 2 months ago

If you are an American and care about privacy:

  • Write your representatives. Your message can be as simple as "I care about privacy". It's important they know you are watching their votes.
  • Participate in elections, particularly downballot elections. Congressional makeup at the federal and state level matters a lot more for these kinds of things than who is president. Many recent laws like "right to repair" etc have happened at the state level since you can bypass federal congressional gridlock.
  • Participate in primaries. Most Americans do not vote, most voters do not vote in primaries. If you don't like having to choose "the lesser of two evils", primaries give you much much more choice to express your preferences. As a primary voter, you have an outsized influence on the electoral system and can help determine the options other people get to choose from.
  • Donate to PACs and non-profits working to protect your right to privacy. The EFF is an awesome non-profit. One benefit of donating to PACs is that they keep an eye on races across the country and help find and fund candidates who will advanced privacy legislation.
  • "Vote with your dollar" when you buy things. In many cases, your purchasing power outweighs the political power of your vote.
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submitted 2 months ago by makeasnek@lemmy.ml to c/firefox@lemmy.ml
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submitted 2 months ago by makeasnek@lemmy.ml to c/opensource@lemmy.ml
-44
submitted 2 months ago by makeasnek@lemmy.ml to c/fediverse@lemmy.world

Interesting history and analysis of SMTP's history. How can we prevent fedi and other open protocols from suffering the same fates?

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submitted 2 months ago by makeasnek@lemmy.ml to c/opensource@lemmy.ml

Interesting history and analysis of SMTP's history. How can we prevent fedi and other open protocols from suffering the same fates?

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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by makeasnek@lemmy.ml to c/privacy@lemmy.ml

Using anonymous global or regional data esims not only improves your privacy, but gives you better service. Because you are usually in roaming, if the coverage of one operator is not good, or they have an outage, you can usually use a different one, which is not possible if you're "at home".

Also you can have one as a backup. Mobimatter has so far the best prices and 1 year validity of data. Keepgo has also good programs. Bitrefill has shorter term, but can be cheaper per gb. All three support crypto payments for additional privacy.

Came across this tip on nostr

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submitted 2 months ago by makeasnek@lemmy.ml to c/asklemmy@lemmy.ml
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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/17934982

SiDock is a volunteer computing project on the !boinc@sopuli.xyz platform which uses the computing power of computers of volunteer's to do open source drug discovery.

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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by makeasnek@lemmy.ml to c/science@lemmy.ml

SiDock is a volunteer computing project on the !boinc@sopuli.xyz platform which uses the computing power of computers of volunteers to do open source drug discovery.

[-] makeasnek@lemmy.ml 55 points 3 months ago

Banning porn nationwide is part of Project 2025's plan. defeatproject2025.org

[-] makeasnek@lemmy.ml 55 points 3 months ago

How to contact your MEP. We beat this bill last time, we can beat it again https://www.europarl.europa.eu/meps/en/home

[-] makeasnek@lemmy.ml 53 points 3 months ago

How to contact your MEP. We beat this bill last time, we can beat it again https://www.europarl.europa.eu/meps/en/home

[-] makeasnek@lemmy.ml 42 points 11 months ago

Agreed. Some people have to shop there for whatever reason. If that's you, the link is good to use :).

[-] makeasnek@lemmy.ml 43 points 1 year ago

Remember that every time you click an ad, you cost the advertiser somewhere between 10c and several dollars. And that which ads you've clicked on informs which ads you will get in the future. It would be a shame if somebody weaponized this knowledge and clicked ads without any actual interest in buying the products.

[-] makeasnek@lemmy.ml 53 points 1 year ago

Because they have multi-party elections, this is probably the single biggest root cause that impacts all levels of government activity and accountability.

[-] makeasnek@lemmy.ml 56 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I would give it all to BOINC !boinc@sopuli.xyz. I donate time and money to this project on a regular basis, but I wish more people knew about BOINC because projects like this give me faith in humanity. BOINC is a open source tool scientists can use to distribute massive computational workloads to the computers of volunteers. Any scientist can use it without institutional backing or approval, it's an open network operating on the petaflop scale. Users can choose which projects they compute for.

BOINC has been used for medical research, finding new asteroids, and identifying new particles at the Large Hadron Collider. Anybody remember seti@home? Ran on BOINC. BOINC was also used to make the first accurate 3D model of the sars-cov-2 spike protein and even helped lead to the design of a shelf-stable vaccine which was distributed to millions. Plus, the project Minecraft@home used it to find the tallest cactus. BOINC has resulted in hundreds of scientific papers that without BOINC would never have gotten funded due to the cost and complexity of the computation involved.

But there is some serious technical debt and usability issues and BOINC has a long-term trend of declining userbase.

[-] makeasnek@lemmy.ml 56 points 1 year ago

I mean obviously we can do both right? We can both fight stupid laws so they never get passed in the first place and then refuse to comply with them if they do.

[-] makeasnek@lemmy.ml 63 points 1 year ago

Not sure why nobody in the comments is distinguishing between blocking a community on an instance (removing /c/piracy) and defederating instances (saying your users can't subscribe to otherinstance.com/c/piracy). They are very different things. We should be very skeptical of defederation.

Removing a community because it violates the rules of your instance is A-OK and every instance should do this. Anybody can run an instance, and anybody can set their own rules, that's the whole idea of federation.

De-federating other instances because you find their content objectionable is less ok. Lemmy is like e-mail. Everybody registers at gmail or office365 or myfavoriteemail.com. Every email host runs their own servers, but they all talk to each other through an open protocol. You would be pissed to find out that gmail just suddenly decided to stop accepting mail from someothermailprovider.com because a bunch of their users are pirates or tankies. Or blocked your favourite email newsletter from reaching your inbox because it had inflammatory political content.

Allowing your users to receive e-mail, or content from subcommunities on other lemmy instances is not a legal risk like hosting the content yourself is (IANAL etc). Same way Gmail is not liable if somebody on some other e-mail server does something illegal by emailing a gmail user. That's why you can register at torrentwebsite.com and get a user confirmation email successfully delivered to your inbox. Gmail is federated with all other e-mail services without needing to endorse them or accept legal liability for them.

Lemmy's strength, value, and future comes from being the largest federated space for link-sharing and other forms of communication.

De-federation is bad.

[-] makeasnek@lemmy.ml 44 points 1 year ago

Garbage headline. This isn't "AI" doing this, it's hiring managers and companies. It's policy. If I put all my applicants into a Microsoft excel spreadsheet and use the sorting function to sort by race, then only hire ones of of a particular skin tone, is Excel keeping millions of qualified candidates out of the workforce? No, of course not. Neither is AI. Replace "AI" with "company policy" in every one of these articles and you get at what's actually occurring.

Same reason we don't need to "regulate AI". We need to regulate it's deployment, just like we regulate whatever technology we used for it previously. In other words, we don't need new rules, we just need enforcement of existing ones. You can't have a hiring process that discriminatory. What tool you use to arrive at that end doesn't matter.

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makeasnek

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