Would love it if they were making a sedan or a subcompact. Not everyone needs or wants a truck.
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Much obliged - I’ll be adding this to my reading list so I don’t get caught without citations again.
TiredTiger@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•US says troops were targeted with location data, as senator warns ad industry is a ‘national security threat’
2·5 days agoThey have a lot on their github, but I have no idea if it’s current: https://github.com/orgs/gl-inet/repositories
If my ISP tries banning my router, I’ll be finding a new ISP. Of course, that’s not going to help if they all fall in line.
I’ve read his newsletter and that was enough.
There’s going to be a great need to properly educate the working class in the west before there’s much hope of socialism gaining any traction. They keep people just educated enough to innoculate them against critical thinking. I forget the exact statistics, but a depressing number of people have not read a single book in their entire adult lives.
There was an old episode of TrueAnon about the links between Epstein (and the CIA) to MIT that went over some of this stuff. I’m sure there’s probably a book or article about it somewhere, but I don’t have any better citation at the moment.
TiredTiger@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•US says troops were targeted with location data, as senator warns ad industry is a ‘national security threat’
2·5 days agoI hear you about the panopticon - I figured getting a Gl.iNet router is some protection, as I know what’s running on it and I can keep all my network traffic behind a VPN with a killswitch. Of course, they could try to make those illegal down the road. Who knows.
GL.iNet’s devices come with their own fork of OpenWRT pre-installed. The UI is easy to navigate and it does everything I need it to, so I haven’t felt any need to install OpenWRT proper, but if you want to, I believe you can easily find instructions to do so online.
He’s Canadian, so he seems to be under the impression that the Canadian equivalents aren’t working with the CIA (though they absolutely are). No vassal state is going to make such a move when they all know what happens to those that step out of line; the empire will have to be way more collapsed before the EU and Canada start testing their leashes.
That doesn’t surprise me. I think he’s probably a socdem at best these days, specifically the kind of lib that thinks that we are in Bad Capitalism and if we just trust bust enough, we can go back to Good Capitalism, and all the smaller companies definitely won’t just devour each other and repeal regulations, putting us in this exact position or worse in another 20-30 years.
TiredTiger@lemmy.mlto
Technology@lemmy.ml•The Internet Has Become Too American to Trust
546·7 days agoIt’s so hard for me to read anything by Cory Doctorow or Ed Zitron these days because there’s always this giant, gaping void where class analysis should be. Is this the time they finally connect the dots, I ask myself? No! It’s never the time. It’s always enshittification this and business idiots that and never, ever a single whisper about capital. Brian Merchant and Ed Ongweso Jr. are much better in this regard - if you haven’t read anything by them I recommend you start.
As to the actual content here, this is precisely what the internet was always created to be. Do you think the
DoDsorry, DoW created this as a happy accident? Just to help people? It’s always been intended as an anti-informational weapon and a surveillance network in-one. And all the attempts by vassal states to wriggle out of the trap will prove futile. China is the only country handling it the right way, and no capitalist nation will ever have the motivation to follow their example. There’s too much money to be made in making their own little tech fiefdoms.
Currently reading about all the horrors of the CIA - finished The Jakarta Method and Washington Bullets, currently reading through Killing Hope, and next on my list is Operation Gladio.
TiredTiger@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•US says troops were targeted with location data, as senator warns ad industry is a ‘national security threat’
1·7 days agoI’ve had one of GL.inet’s routers for over a year now and I’m really happy with it. I surprisingly did not have my ISP barking at me when I replaced my old one with it, which was a relief. I don’t use a mobile carrier for my home internet though, so I don’t know if they’re more picky about what you use.
TiredTiger@lemmy.mlto
Technology@lemmy.ml•DuckDuckGo is growing thanks to Google users frustrated by AI features
7·8 days agoUnfortunately, neither is anywhere close to how good Google used to be, unless they’ve improved in leaps and bounds since I last tried them. I just want to be able to use boolean search terms again, and the fact that most modern search engines don’t utilize them has me tearing my hair out.
TiredTiger@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•US says troops were targeted with location data, as senator warns ad industry is a ‘national security threat’
7·8 days agoSeconding this for anyone looking to buy one. Their pre-installed OpenWRT firmware is easy enough to use, and you can also set up AdGuard Home on some models (like a pi-hole but on your router).
I would never, ever use the router or modem an ISP tries to stick you with. They charge you monthly for those, for one thing. I wouldn’t be surprised if they had monitoring stuff on them, for another.
TiredTiger@lemmy.mlto
Technology@lemmy.ml•DuckDuckGo is growing thanks to Google users frustrated by AI features
232·8 days agoPart of the problem is that most of these privacy-protecting search engines are just the big search engines re-packaged; DuckDuckGo is Bing, and Startpage is Google. SearchXNG is just an aggregator, and so is Kagi. What we really need are some alternative engines that function as well as Google used to. I would be willing to pay for that, as relying on ads clearly doesn’t work.
TiredTiger@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Websites have a new way to spy on visitors: Analyzing their SSD activity
2·8 days agoIt seems to me that Apple products would be the most susceptible to this, as there are a limited number of hardware variations as well as a walled garden for software.
The article mentions it technically being possible to do on a Linux machine, but I doubt it would be as easy to get conclusive data from it, when the SSD could be any size or brand and the software it could be running is nigh-limitless. I don’t doubt it could extract some data, I just don’t think it would have the level of granular detail they’re saying they got on the M2.
I’m wondering whether having separate partitions on a drive would be enough to defend against this, or whether you would need actually physically separate drives.
I wish they’d channel that energy into developing class consciousness instead, but then they’ve been heavily disincentivized to do so between propaganda and the desire for wealth of their own.
Agreed, but until people start moving to PeerTube, we’re stuck with half-measures.
Invidious or another front-end of your choice, presumably.
TiredTiger@lemmy.mlto
World News@lemmy.ml•Israel applies Gaza model to Lebanon - Liberation News
3·11 days agoIt does seem like it’s either allow Isntreal to finish its genocide (unconscionable) or risk it retaliating with nuclear force. There are no good options here.


I swear someone wrote the plans for the operation 20 years ago and they just never bothered to update them.