dropdrip

joined 2 months ago
[–] dropdrip@lemmy.ml 7 points 2 days ago (3 children)

And they put people in house arrest, because... ? I just saw tanks being transported on public-roads today. So the reason couldn't be to covertly move weapons: that goes on in public, in broad daylight and that transit sits alongside vans delivering ice-creams to convenience stores. So, the big cabal wanted to put people under house arrest... to do what?

Pick up a book. Pandemics aren't new and neither is the orchestrated response to them by governing bodies. History can be a good reference.

[–] dropdrip@lemmy.ml 10 points 4 days ago

It would be funny, if it weren't true... software is literally clown-world. Bebop boop!~ The computer says we need to do X. Bebop boop!~ We must do X! The computer demands it. Oh look, software owners' wealth increases exponentially. What a curious thing... Bebop boop!~ Computer says we need to do Y too now. Bebop boop!~ I like following instructions from my computer. Bebop boop!~

It's practically a religion. Users spend hours per day, silently, head bowed down in supple devotion, waiting for the computer's next commandments. I can feel it; it's coming brothers--bebop boop!~

[–] dropdrip@lemmy.ml 3 points 5 days ago

Matrix's origin is Israel's intelligence community. One could argue the authors are rebels, being insiders themselves, who've begun to fight back against the surveillance state that they intimately know. That's a naive and foolish thing to think. The project's design is awful from a 'privacy' perspective, with the design specifically allowing third-parties to silently 'intercept' users' data--all whilst still being 'E2EE'. It's a feature. That's the amusing thing about its absolutely shit design, but regardless of design choices, encryption has always been a lagging component of the program.

The cynic might observe that the whole thing was proposed with foresight as to create a compromised leader ready to be adopted by organizations that felt they needed a higher degree of security. Matrix is a good solution, or so government bureaucrats are told.

Let Tel Aviv inside.

[–] dropdrip@lemmy.ml -1 points 6 days ago

You're right, but I doubt any of them are interested in contributing in any capacity. They just want to continue using Windows, Google and Netflix. Only now, in the year 2026, the absolute monstrosity that is the digital surveillance-apparatus, pokes its tentacles--every now and then--prominently into public-life and some get the willies. Never mind it's been going on since the beginning of the computer-age. They don't care. They never did. They enable it and they exacerbate it. They still don't care.

[–] dropdrip@lemmy.ml 11 points 6 days ago (2 children)

Your post is a great example of the conditioned expectation that American technology-companies have created. I don't use this app. I don't see any ads.

[–] dropdrip@lemmy.ml 1 points 6 days ago

You are correct.

[–] dropdrip@lemmy.ml 43 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

These programs are a waste of your time and resources. It is useless network spam who's only outcome is to accelerate web-admins to move towards stricter filters to protect their computer resources from such spam.

The concept is wildly broken, because its perception of surveillance is incorrect. It puts too large an emphasis on web-traffic. This isn't the 90s anymore.

I genuinely want to know what is going on in the author's head. This is a program for Google's Android--Google's Android. It is their operating-system and where a lot of signals are captured. Google sees that you've downloaded Fauxx, even if you install it from a third-party (i.e. not from Google's PlayStore(tm)). They know what time your alarms are set for. They intercept every text message, every phone-call, every e-mail, every notification. If you have Bluetooth(tm) or other wireless protocols enabled they know what other wireless-signals are around you. They know when you're driving, when you're idle, when you're at work and when you're asleep.

Clicking on random links isn't fooling anybody. Sophisticated algorithms look for trends, not one offs 'hey, this user clicked on an ad for a product sold by Y'. Regardless of how much you think you're spamming the network Google has access to millions of controls: people the same age, gender, ethnicity and whatever else, to compare against. People who are diligently populating databases with correct data.

I read the f-droid page--before anyone points to the spoofing of location data as some kind of protection--let me put real emphasis on: this isn't the 90s. This is sophisticated mass-surveillance in 2026 that only increases in sophistication as time goes on. Users purchase increasingly sophisticated mobile-computers that are awake 24/7/365 scanning for an increasing list of wireless protocols which means more data for Google. More sophisticated patterns and algorithms to work alongside and with their national-defense contractors.

Google thinks you're in the population that might commit political-violence. The NSA, CIA, FBI et al have been notified and now there's human-eyes on you too, not just the surveillance of unthinking machines. Good fun.

Google doesn't need a GPS signal to know where you are, where you live and where you work. They have access to a live map of global wifi-access points, cell-towers, Bluetooth(tm) beacons and a host of other signals. That map is updated daily by all the drones who go though life using their Google Android mobile-computer. Try as one might, this is a collective problem. On one hand it is Google's mass-surveillance program, but they can only do what they do because everyone else is a snitch for them. A willing snitch. A snitch that believes there is no other way, but to be a snitch. Just try and convince someone not to use Google's products.

Regardless, for privacy this is a pointless piece of software. You'll just make Google richer. Those websites and ads clicked on were already paid for. Whether they represent your actual interests or not is besides the point. The transaction already happened and you just made Google minusculely richer. The correct thing to do is to block ad-networks from your network so they never even get loaded.

If you want to protect yourself from Google's mass-surveillance systems don't use Google. Use a GNU/Linux mobile-computer or GrapheneOS. To combat the effects of mass-surveillance (that is, the surveillance of you by the masses who do use Google's products) get political. It seems absurd and a threat to national security that the domestic economy is held ransom by Google and Apple.

I'll preempt the criticism of GrapheneOS by juveniles who barely have two brain-cells. GrapheneOS only works on Google branded mobile-computers. Ergo buying a Google product would make Google even richer than randomly clicking on Google's ads, which go for what? $0.0006c USD?

Google's product isn't the hardware. It's subsidized and I wouldn't be surprised if it was sold near cost (anyone who actually has information about this I'd be genuinely interested in reading). It's not even made by Google. It's made by the same factories that makes Apple's mobile-computers and a host of other retailers' devices. Don't get hung up on the branding. Turning off a spigot for Google's mass-surveillance system is infinitely more powerful than continuing to contribute to it, but with additional 'noise' that doesn't even register.

Outside the domain of privacy I don't like this idea of spamming networks or loading completely random garbage. At the most benign-end of the spectrum you're just wasting whatever data-allowance you're paying for. At the malicious-end you could be contacting malicious-servers (ad-networks are obtusely not in this category, but should be).

[–] dropdrip@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)

Yes. I am just tired, comrade. Once can argue about the tone, but the reality is there needs to be a rectification on computer-education on a scale that only a government can enact. I can not do it. I can just rebuke.

Juvenile views do need to be rebuked. If you believe you can regain a portion of control back via payment to an entity, whilst still living in ignorance of the substrate you wish to increase control over you are a moron. You are merely paying for a belief.

I can not understand the user's insistence on ignorance. All the users here are aware, to differing degrees, of the abuses that are inflicted on them due to this ignorance, yet there is a crowd who adamantly refuse to use their eyes; they wish merely to do the same things they were doing before, with no change in their own behaviors. They will continue to be abused.

I think the reality is they have no interest in the topic.

[–] dropdrip@lemmy.ml 0 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

I think entertainment is a very low priority. Pushed to comment on the topic I would say it's actually a great waste of time, regardless of political orientation.

It's isolating and manipulative. It subverts the local culture and brainwashes the viewer into believing that what is seen often on the screen is a reflection of real life norms. It is not, but when the majority of a citizenry consume so much foreign media it does shift real cultural norms. This is the soft-power of cultural products created for export.

Turn America's netflix off. Turn off whatever pornography you preference. Move your body. Get some sunshrine and play with your comrades.

I genuinely believe television was a mistake. I can not see anything of its legacy to feel warm towards; there is no good here.

[–] dropdrip@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

OP, was the article made by AI? It's such a short read, yet has a table-of-contents, FAQ and too many sub-headings. I won't comment on AI's utility, but this is a mess of an article. That's not a critique of AI--website articles turned into incoherent messes before the public could utilize such software. An observation is that AI cannot stop this degradation, but only accelerates it...

[–] dropdrip@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 week ago

Of course, comrade. Management were previously unaware of their value; this has been rectified and the unmistakable value is now seen!

[–] dropdrip@lemmy.ml 9 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (12 children)

A VPN does not protect the user from the type of sophisticated mass-surveillance that exists now and will only become increasingly more sophisticated without political critique. Users who are confused about the criticism of a capitalist-company when its benefactors are known to further entrench a beneficial political-ideology are simpletons who do not grasp the relationship between the Western-democracies and its political mass-surveillance organs that go on to spawn the private-surveillance companies that do get public critique (Google, Microsoft, Apple, Palantir, et al.).

No, a VPN is not better than nothing. Do more. Do better. Adopt real solutions like GNUnet. Liberate your computers with free software.

inb4 simpletons just want to use a VPN to watch mah netflix. Ok boomer.

 

I'm looking for sites that host open data. It'd be nice if they were collaborative projects too, like a site that tracks prices of domestic-groceries that's updated by users. By "open" I don't mean monetarily-free, but rather data that is free from restrictive-licenses. A website that hosts free data, uploaded by its users, with the agreement that all data uploaded then belongs to the entity that hosts it is something I am not looking for. OpenStreetMap is a good example of what I'm looking for, I think... I'm under the impression the data uploaded by the user still belongs to the user. I may be mistaken though.

A cursory search found this website: https://library.bu.edu/bizdata/free-data . I haven't gone through the links on that page yet, but in case I can't find what I'm looking for there I thought I'd also ask users here.

Originally I wanted to find a repository of currency-conversion prices, but then I began to wonder about libre data repositories in general.

 

Going through my family's photo album... with every moment being recorded in this surveillance hellscape there will be a generation of people who can watch themselves being born, or conceived--in SD, HD, 4k or 8k. Add audio too: mono or stereo? Surround sound? If that's not time-travel I don't know what is.

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