slackness

joined 3 days ago
[–] slackness@lemmy.ml 2 points 18 hours ago (1 children)

I gave you the real reason it should be controversial. Brave's fuck ups have not been significantly worse than other companies'.

re: open source In theory: yes. In practice: maybe. It'll probably eventually be caught by some researcher but unlike popular belief all open source code bases are not constantly being audited by the community. A random person can't just read Brave source code for all platforms and accurately gauge if they're doing something nefarious. It is very easy to hide stuff in code or misuse a protocol for evil purposes, etc.

You can modify the source code but as evident by the fact that there's no Brave fork with crypto removed (there was one but their branding was too similar to Brave's so they got sued), it's not an easy feat to maintain that.

[–] slackness@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 day ago

Running those adblockers on your devices is extremely insecure. They register as a VPN and intercept HTTPS traffic. They decrypt the encrypted traffic, filter it, and encrypt again meaning all your communications are signed by this single app's certificate. Not to mention any vulnerability would wreak havoc.

https://grapheneos.org/faq#ad-blocking-apps

[–] slackness@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 day ago (4 children)

It's backed by Peter Thiel who is a war mongering Nazi billionaire.

[–] slackness@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 day ago

Can you really talk about E2EE on a closed source app? The whole point of E2EE is I don't trust the vendor. If they give me a blob as a client and tell me it's E2EE, am I supposed to just trust them all of a sudden?

[–] slackness@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 day ago

What about people planning terrorist attacks before they go into Austria? The geniuses did not think about that.

[–] slackness@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 day ago

Cool channel, never came across it before. Always good to find high production quality Linux channels.

[–] slackness@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 day ago

The Netflix analogy does not make any sense in this context.

they could always ask. Ask and then listen.

Not nearly enough people turn on optional telemetry. I'll bet you don't always either.

 

I'm looking into buying one of AMD's newer GPUs. Either a 9060xt or 9070xt. Is there a way to track driver support (I know they're supported but I'm interested in bugs/missing features/performance/etc.) for these cards other than asking people who owns them?

I will be on latest Mesa and firmware so I'm interested in the current state.

[–] slackness@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (12 children)

I know Brave is controversial but they were the only ones (edit: not sure about Vanadium, I'm curious if they were vulnerable) disallowing JS to access localhost thus blocking Meta and Yandex's recently discovered spying.

Sounds like such a no brainer to not allow random websites to communicate with the localhost and very easily circumvent all sandboxing you spent thousands of hours building. Looking at you Android (Google) and all the browser vendors (also Google?, huh).

[–] slackness@lemmy.ml 5 points 2 days ago

First genocide ever to be livestreamed to anyone who don't want to turn a blind eye.

[–] slackness@lemmy.ml 7 points 2 days ago (2 children)

I am happy they're giving people a choice. On the other hand, the fact is, (privacy respecting) telemetry is the only way to make a program as complicated as a web browser better. Especially important when your competition is a giant data hoarder with orders of magnitude more users. And people will just not turn on opt-in telemetry.

[–] slackness@lemmy.ml 4 points 3 days ago

What's up with the attitude like gpu accelerated terminals aren't extremely popular? If you're fine with what you're using, have fun and tone down the high horse.

[–] slackness@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 days ago

Is there an easy way to transition from Spotify other than looking for all of your songs yourself?

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