

Differences are inconsequential aside from image manipulation, asyncio_websockets, librsvg, and AV1.


Differences are inconsequential aside from image manipulation, asyncio_websockets, librsvg, and AV1.
Not worth blowing up an essential avenue of interacting with the modern world, especially for finding employment.
It’s better to look at the privacy implications of the KYC laws and address them individually.


You can change the shortcuts on most desktops. At least I know you can on KDE and Cinnamon.


It comes with the exact keybindings for what you are used to from Windows.
Except Kate/Kwrite defaults to Ctrl+R for replace, CTRL+H for find selected, and something else I don’t remember. The shortcuts can be changed though.


Even a broken clock is right twice a day.
AI slop implies the problem is that the audience likes it, and to some that is the problem, but the real issue is how difficult it makes it to find the stuff you actually want to see. “AI spam” is the term I default to using.


Firstly Proton is a non-profit.
Secondly security and privacy are two different things (albeit their connected).
Thirdly no company, for-profit or otherwise, is going to break the law for you.


There’s a difference between what you’re talking about and the types of VPN they’re talking about banning. They can easily ban the exchange of money in return for encrypted proxy services.
Don’t be naive, the use of VPN’s in IT doesn’t protect us.
Yes, we all know history ended in 1991
You need a lot of justify the loss of life these wars cause. Putting aside whether they’re justified or not, neither of them meet that threshold.
Genuine question, but has there ever been a war where the expansionist was justified?
They’re not invading Russia other than a small little portion a few years after the war started.
Those Nazi battalions would be far less defensible if Russia didn’t pose a credible military threat to Ukraine.


Proton Pass is a valid option.
If you think superhuman AI will kill us, you probably think fluoride will kill us.
If we willingly hand over the nuclear codes to the normalhuman AI though, as I could plausibly foresee a certain Epstein client doing, then AI will kill us all.


Removed by mod


The heads of the judiciary and foreign affairs committees said in a joint letter to Anandasangaree the bill would “drastically expand Canada’s surveillance and data access powers in ways that create significant cross-border risks to the security and data privacy of Americans.” They said it would allowThey said it would allow “Canadian government officials to compel American companies to build backdoors into their encrypted systems, thereby introducing systemic vulnerabilities that could be exploited by hackers, foreign adversaries, and cybercriminals.”
The spokesperson for the public safety minister said the letter reflects a misunderstanding of how the bill would function.
So do the people who wrote this bill not understand how encryption works, or is the American government staffed by conspiracy theorist nutters?
EDIT: Looked it up and, little bit of both, little bit of neither. It basically bans the idea of “systemically private” services, any privacy needs to be subject to human whims and therefore court orders. Revocable privacy is not privacy.


Fedora and OpenSUSE, primarily.


Regardless, I can’t trust a distro with such a chaotic management structure on security.


Maybe the solution is to just, delete a bunch of kernel modules.
How many of them are actually important anyway?
I wouldn’t call that “hacking”. That’s like calling someone who walks in after you leave the door unlocked a “lockpicker”.
“Phishing” would be a better word here. Hacking implies a security vulnerability in Signal.