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Posts
314
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342
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • I hope it won’t run bank apps. When my bank tries to shut down their website and force me onto a smartphone (which is inherently not a smart move for privacy and security), I want to be able to show them that their app won’t run on my linux phone so there is pressure to keep the website running.

    Fuck phone banking. Let’s have some separation of church and state.

    boot lickers who want to run corporate spyware → Android or iOSfreedom seekers who want to keep their dignity and autonomy → linux

    Worth noting that banks deliberately block alternative platforms. Some detect whether they are running in an emulator and refuse to run. And “emulator” is very loose. I saw a bank app refuse to run on a laptop that natively ran Android.

  • Wow, what utopian government is that?

    The shitshow with online gov docs in recent decades is they have been converted to apps¹, and they are structured as multi-page interviews. If you do not supply your name, email address, etc on the first page, you cannot even see the rest of the “document”. So you don’t even get to see what interrogation is coming without incrementally giving some data online.

    The EU is an example. The have-your-say portal and the “Resolvit” mechanism have no offline forms. No static HTML or PDF form to print out. The Belgians even legally mandate form submissions that are sometimes exclusively online, and with a red asterisk next to the email field (meaning you cannot submit the form without providing an email address that enables all the data to traverse Microsoft’s servers).

    With the EU, there are undocumented channels. You can ad-hoc write a freestyle letter, guess about what information is required, and then guess about what physical address to send it to. With various member states, sometimes the physical address is not even published. You have to read the legal statutes to find out what agency oversees the agency you need to contact, then submit an open data request to the oversight agency’s postal address, then wait a month for their response just to get the address -- if they respond at all. Sometimes they ignore these requests, then you have to complain to the ombudsman just to pressure the oversight agency just to disclose an address.

    ¹ Simple static HTML is a document. As soon as JavaScript is required, it’s no longer a document -- it’s an app that requires execution.

  • Cashless society, forced banking 💳, and the War on Cash 💰 @slrpnk.net

    you can pay cash to take a bus and ferry to the UK, but how do you pay the travel authorisation fee (£16)?

  • Scams @hilariouschaos.com

    Travel authorisation (ETA) scams -- both legal and illegal scams target Americans, and Europeans

    europe.pub /post/9839651
  • Interesting about the typo. That’s actually a software defect. My text had “19”, but Lemmy apparently decided I wanted a sequential itemised list. To force it, I had to make the 19 literal (using ticks), which now causes it to indent and become part of item 12.

    (edit) found a better workaround: introduced a blank line.

  • Right to be Offline / Offgrid / Analog / Unplugged 🔌📪📖📟📝 @sopuli.xyz

    🛃🙊 The spread of travel authorisations (🇺🇸→🇬🇧→🇪🇺) has scrapped our visa-free travel rights. How do offline and unbanked people handle this? Or do they just have to pound sand?

  • Human Rights✊⚖ @crazypeople.online

    🛃🙊 The spread of travel authorisations (🇺🇸→🇬🇧→🇪🇺) has scrapped our visa-free travel rights. Also resulting in privacy loss and suppression of speech.

  • The US demands social media accounts to snoop through as part of the travel authorsation procedure. Someone coming from a developing country got the opportunity of a lifetime: entry into an Ivy league university like Harvard. When he landed in the US, ICE could not find any dirt on him. So they snooped through the social media comments of his /friends/. One of his friends said something critical of the US. So the guy was denied entry. Harvard was blocked.

    If you claim to have no social media accounts, they don’t believe you. And they don’t have to. Border control has discretion to bounce any non-citizen they want.

    I’m not sure what snooping the UK does but the cost alone is a deterrant for me.

    The travel auth is required just for passing through a country. So a Moroccan whose route stops in Madrid, then London, then New York, before landing in Canada, will have to pay: €20+£16+$21, despite not staying in any of those places. There are 3 opportunities in that case for a country to find something disloyal they in the traveler’s social media acct. If blocked, is there a refund? No. It’s a gamble of both time and money. For security theatre.

  • Belgium @europe.pub

    Belgians must pay £16 to enter the UK. Strictly enforced as of this month.

    europe.pub /post/9908351
  • Europe @europe.pub

    UK imposes ETAs on EU citizens too, now. (the money grab: £16/2yrs)

  • Cashless society, forced banking 💳, and the War on Cash 💰 @slrpnk.net

    🇧🇪(Belgium) KBC has just become a shit bank by joining the ATM cartel. Are there any “decent” banks left in Belgium?

    belgae.social /post/1108211
  • Brussels⚜ @fedia.io

    KBC has just become a shit bank by joining the ATM cartel. Are there any “decent” banks left in Belgium?

    belgae.social /post/1108211
  • Brussels⚜ @fedia.io

    belgae.social /c/brussels
  • Europe @europe.pub

    ETIAS -- The nannying practice of imposing travel authorisations is coming to Europe. €20 per person. A shitty idea from the US is spreading.

    schengenvisainfo.com /etias/
  • Article 77 is just making this explicit: You complain where you are living (even cross country!), where you work or where the suspected violation took place. It doesn't say anything more.

    Indeed I am exploiting that option. I have lost confidence in my country of residence. The EDPB reports show that most DPAs are understaffed and up to their necks in work. Germany was an exception. Germany has far more resources for GDPR complaints than most of Europe.

    Because of this there is no standard form to fill out: it depends on the agency itself where you choose to enter your complaint.

    So Germany does not have a nationwide form? Each of the 17 agencies have their own? I guess I have to work out which region I am dealing with first.

    But before that, I need to know if the federal agency is who I am working with. The data controller referred me to the Federal agency, but that seems off.. from what I have read, the Federal agency is just a single point of contact for the EDPB. I see nothing about the fed handling GDPR complaints.

    (edit) I found the relevent region. I think I’ll distrust the controller’s referral to the federal office and use the regional. Which has its own form.

  • Germany @europe.pub

    Germany has 17 DPAs, each covering a region. Plus there is a federal DPA, apparently. Where do complaints go on cross-border situations?

    www.datenschutzkonferenz-online.de /datenschutzaufsichtsbehoerden.html
  • General Data Protection Regulation (“GDPR”) ⚖ @sopuli.xyz

    Germany has 17 DPAs, each covering a region. Plus there is a federal DPA, apparently. Where do complaints go on cross-border situations?

    www.datenschutzkonferenz-online.de /datenschutzaufsichtsbehoerden.html
  • 🌱Climate Change🌡⛈ @slrpnk.net

    There is pushback against greenwashing by a Canadian org. ESG shenanigans exposed.

    www.bbc.co.uk /programmes/w3ct6s80
  • Downtime, bugs, and failures on any kind of service (email, web, XMPP, etc) 🖧🔌🐞 @sopuli.xyz

    Belgian service “itsme” is not a bank. But it is listed as such for GrapheneOS users

    github.com /PrivSec-dev/banking-apps-compat-report/issues/276
  • Thanks. I noticed that but I would have to wait till I have a decent connection and then I wouldn’t understand the German anyway.

  • Just commenting based on the title since I am blocked from YT and also don’t speak German. (An English transcript would be useful)


    Ditching Gmail is trivially easy. Boycotting gmail is where the interesting conversation is, because often you need to reach someone who uses gmail. You can do an MX lookup on the domain of the recipient’s email address, but that only works about 70% of the time. If they use an email firewall like Barracuda or a forwarding address, then there is no way to know where the email route ends.

    If I cannot get confidence from an MX lookup, then the recipient is getting a fax or postal letter from me. Google could still end up in the loop, but as long as you don’t reveal an email address to the recipient, at least you remain in control over what Google collects and profits from.

  • Belgium @europe.pub

    Scarlet vindicated from being forced to implement snooping filters to hit customers who use p2p to share copyrighted works

  • thanks but it does not solve my problem. My internet is capped so i can’t do streaming.

  • Not sure that’s a sufficient explanation. So I will elaborate for the OP:

    Some designs are called a “wet floor”, which means the whole bathroom floor is sloped toward a drain even outside the shower and beyond the showerpan. It’s seems to be a design in cheaper establishments, like cheap hostels. It works but it can be annoying when the floor is still wet when later entering the bathroom in socks or something.

    Some designs are more luxury, and have a really big shower pan. A big area is sloped within the shower as an elegant “curbless” design which is great for elderly and handicapped people who might struggle to step over a shower curb. The shower pan is big enough that if the drain is slow or clogged, a fair amount of water can build up without overspilling into the rest of the bathroom.

  • I’m not sure what you want a source for. You mean a vendor who will sell one? XO-4 Touch was apparently the last model. I just had a look at laptop.org and the site looks useless now. It used to be full of wikis with copious details about the hardware and software of the OLPC.

    There are (or were) a variety of NGOs who worked on getting OLPCs into impoverished schools. One of them was https://unleashkids.org/. They are not in the business of selling them but ~15 yrs ago they were kind enough to sell some. The idea was that teachers and developers would need them to help support the OLPC project. I suggest touching base with them and see what they say, since they seem to still be around.

    The XO-4 Touch came with “Sugar”, a foss OS just for kids. It was easy to make it boot into Gnome instead (underpinned by RedHat). And someone made an Android OS that could be flashed onto an SD card and booted in the OLPC. I should mention that the OLPC was never 100% FOSS. The usual shit-show of blobs for some of the hardware drivers. I mainly just used it as an e-reader on Gnome.

    I’ve always been baffled that these FOSS e-ink laptops did not make it onto the general marketplace, while at the same time there were no commercial makers of anything like it. There was a “Pixel QI” dual-mode screen that could be bought bare and installed in Thinkpads and other machines, but for some reason that never took off either.

  • OLPC (one-laptop-per-child) is a FOSS e-ink laptop (but small enough to function as an e-reader). Though I think they are no longer made and they were always hard to get.

  • From the PDF, one of the EU’s concerns is:

    However, much of the value generated by open-source projects is exploited outside the EU, often benefiting tech giants.

    When tech giants use FOSS, it’s a shame they can extract wealth without compensating the contributors. OTOH, if the baddies become dependent on FOSS, that’s favorable anyway. It means they might contribute code to the projects which otherwise would not happen.

    The PDF does not cover public schools specifically. They need to be told that public schools are the most important place to deploy FOSS. Consider a university in Denmark pushes commercial software on students (sadly, they provide that software on a campus webpage improperly titled “Free Software” b/c it is gratis for students). The damage is of course that Denmark educates people to be dependent or clung-onto closed-source software like MATLAB, not GNU Octave. That negative training means the young generations are being conditioned to favor non-free software.

    FSFE does not know about this?

    The FSFE has a newsletter for “public money → public code”. They have not mentioned this /have your say/ page. Strange.

    Downvotes?

    I get why the OP was downvoted here.. this is a bit off-topic for BuyFromEU. But !ETS@europe.pub has 4 silent down votes. WTF? I’ve seen that before. ETS seems to be heavily read by opponents of ETS.

  • Thanks for the link. The translation was a bit rough because they apparently used quite colorful wording. My take away was that it was to save money -- what a terrible way to save money.

    I recently found that some libraries are keeping their media. They are just being cut off from the Médiathéque organisation.

  • Thanks for the link. The article is a bit vague (at least the machine translation of it). I get the impression they are saying a hypermarket type of business is unsustainable. If that’s accurate, then I guess we can expect to see Carrefour fall as well.

  • oh, that’s a bummer. Thanks for the info. You saved me some effort in tracking down the brewery.

  • The petitions are again something else.

    I was indeed alienated by the mention of petitions because in English it usually means asking lawmakers to change policy. I wondered if it meant something different in Germany. And if it means the same thing, it’s apparently wrong for the EU to list that agency as an ombudsman.

    I am normally happy to use courts. But I don’t live in Germany, don’t speak German, and financing a lawyer would be a non-starter. I suppose I could try to find a German NGO who would support my case.