[-] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

he has said a lot of things to get his point across. when you are dealing with people that speak multiple languages via mailing list, sometimes it takes a little hyperbole.

my complaint about him is how little he cares about security. great lead dev in so many ways except that aspect

[-] [email protected] 2 points 11 months ago

haha yeah, for 26 years now. year of the OpenPGP any day now.

I agree with you, but the vast majority of people will always sell themselves out for convenience. If PGP caught on, you'd have iPhones with a built-in PGP messaging feature that sends everything unencrypted straight to apple before it sends the encrypted version.

[-] [email protected] 4 points 11 months ago

nearly all your data is public, so there's no need for anyone to pay for it. this is a public platform where everything is relayed unencrypted to other activitypub nodes. If I click your name here and try to DM you I even see this warning: "Warning: Private messages in Lemmy are not secure. Please create an account on Element.io for secure messaging."

[-] [email protected] 2 points 11 months ago

Why do you think all these dipshit red states are trying to make porn sites go ham on the identification and gathering data just to watch porn? Could it be because they have ulterior motives and wanna target gay and other “sinful” people?

this is pretty tangential, but I live in one of those states, I don't agree with the law, but I'm pretty sure their ulterior motives are securing votes. The reason people like those laws is that they think the laws protect children (they don't, they make the internet more dangerous.) But those people pushing the laws really don't give a fuck about gay people watching porn

[-] [email protected] 9 points 11 months ago

Encrypting user data is pretty standard in the industry, and even required by law in the instance of servers hosting medical information in the US. Consumer software for disk encryption like you mentioned is substantially different from usual encryption solutions employed by data centers. Whole disk encryption is commonly done at a firmware or hardware level. For an example, iPhone embedded storage is fully encrypted and tied to the rest of the phone's hardware. No user input required.

It wouldn't have mattered if the guy had encryption any way because, as the article mentioned:

To make matters worse, it appears that the admin targeted in the raid was in the middle of maintenance work which left would-be-encrypted material on the server available in unencrypted form at the time of seizure.

[-] [email protected] 7 points 11 months ago

psych ward was worse than jail. I've been to both. did not help. caused trauma, more problems. going to an expensive dual diagnosis (mental & drug) rehab, then sober living was great and did help though

[-] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

sideberry

thanks for the comment, used tree-style tabs forever and now switched

[-] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

this is a seperate issue, and no, it wouldn't fix the issue, maybe improve it a little though. as stated in the article, not everything would be in ~/.config/kde, and IME there are files scattered over ~/.local/share that you might also consider config you want to export.

Personally, I've tracked down 80-90% of the settings I care about and put them in git, but it was tedious, and some things can't really be shared across machines, while some other things need to be cleared of machine specific information to work as a new "default base config"

[-] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

i haven't looked too deeply into it, but a lot of kde config files already have some sort of update and version data. transitioning to new locations shouldn't be TOO difficult. I think everyone can agree it should be done. I imagine that naming and specific locations could turn into bikeshedding though.

It's been tempting for me to use some LD_PRELOAD magic to clean things up. I'm the kind of person that keeps my home directory read-only and uses custom environment variables for particularly egregious applications.

[-] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

I did like 15 years ago. Now everyone wants to use discord. It wasn't up to me. Social factors are a bitch

[-] [email protected] 8 points 1 year ago

I don't criticize, I just give fair warnings. I want people to enjoy Linux like I do, not call me every other week because something is "broken"

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