kbal

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 hour ago

I don't know about the Canada Post changes but "the government reading your mail doesn't matter because snail mail is obsolete anyway" doesn't seem like a good attitude to bring to it.

I don't know about the refugee law changes but "government needs the authority to act on the fly unconstrained by the rule of law in case there's a crisis" doesn't seem like a reasonable kind of thing to say about it.

You seem to have no comment on the part about foreign states being "empowered to compel the production" of data or the other changes relating to "subscriber information and transmission data" which seem quite dangerous and are the things I've most often seen other people worried about.

And then of course you don't mention at all the "lawful access" part, both horrific and easy to understand, wherein electronic service providers can be obligated to assist CSIS and the cops in spying on their users in every way possible, and forbidden from telling anyone when they've been ordered to do so.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 4 hours ago (1 children)

Cameras in the house? That is still creepy.

[–] [email protected] 18 points 8 hours ago

Yeah, it's clear why they're unhappy about it. What's the point of pretending to take action if you can't then lie about what a great job you did?

[–] [email protected] 22 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

I'm sure It will probably be fine for at least a year or two before the new owners manage to ruin it somehow but anyway I'll just go make sure I have a full backup of my 150 gigabytes of skyrim mods.

 

On June 3, 2025, the Canadian government tabled Bill C-2, omnibus legislation that, if passed, would introduce a wide array of new federal agency and law enforcement powers, and would significantly reform substantive and due process laws in Canada for migrants and asylum seekers. Our preliminary analysis of Bill C-2 situates the legislation within the context of existing research by the Citizen Lab about two potential data-sharing treaties that are most relevant to the new proposed powers being introduced in Bill C-2: the Second Additional Protocol to the Budapest Convention (2AP) and the CLOUD Act. Both of which carry significant constitutional and human rights risks.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 day ago

Maybe he still owns the quarry down the road.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 1 day ago (2 children)

How on earth did CDPR fall on such hard times that they had to bring in Epic Games to make an engine for them?

[–] [email protected] 39 points 2 days ago

I wouldn't be willing to disable my vpn for the nyt so thanks for confirming that it wouldn't have made a difference. It appears that they now block everyone who doesn't let javascript freely do whatever it wants to fingerprint you or whatever. I'll not miss them too much.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 3 days ago

autokey — a recent "autohotkey" sort of thing for linux. It comes to mind since I recently had to find a replacement for the one I'd used previously which died of bitrot. Mostly I just use it for app-specific key remapping for Firefox so that I can disable its ^W which I only ever hit accidentally when it was possible.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Mastodon is very bad at fetching replies, if you have a small instance I think you need to add some other software to do that: https://blog.thms.uk/fedifetcher

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 days ago

It was just bothering me this morning (not the time of day but I want ISO date format.) It's probably this bug: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1935895

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 days ago

Your "empirical" sample size of one may be too small to get an accurate reading on the views of contemporary Christianity.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 days ago

The point of the 1.5° goal was to give policy makers an idea of how much time they'd have to get serious about reducing greenhouse gas emissions at a pace that would be acceptable to politicians and economists. According to the plans they came up with back in 2015 we'll need world emissions to start going down by 2020, so there's not much time left.

 

My thumb is itchy.

 

30 years ago somebody told me their opinion about "Changes" but I didn't know what Changes was. I just remembered to look it up, and according to Wikipedia it could've been any of about 50 things.

 

Browsers should probably just stop sending user-agent header at all, ideally.

If anyone else was wondering why some websites and the "Alternate Player for Twitch.tv" extension stopped working in the latest Librewolf update, it's because they changed the userAgent string from Firefox to LibreWolf and way too much shitty code is confused by it looking like firefox but then not being firefox.

 

I am enjoying the Oblivion remaster except for one thing: Lockpicking. I was good at the old Oblivion lock picking. There was a clear audio cue, I have good ears I guess, and it was both easy and satisfying. Many found it impossible, but I had the gift.

In the remaster they've removed that audio cue and now there is only the visual motion of the tumblers to react to. I do not have fast eyes, only fast ears as it turns out. I am bad at the new lockpicking. Curse your laziness, anonymous Virtuos programmer who chose to take that shortcut.

 

Wishing a happy International Bat Appreciation Day to all who celebrate.

 

Even before the election was called, the Greens unveiled their plan to counter the global and domestic challenges posed by Donald Trump’s chaotic government. It’s chock full of good ideas, including many you wouldn’t normally expect: Improving the east-west energy grid to beef up national energy sovereignty; ramping up domestic artillery production; the stoppage of observing U.S-imposed intellectual property laws; and integrating more closely with the European, Australian, and Ukrainian defence industries.

 

Well I decided to upgrade to Debian testing last night on my desktop here, just for fun. It seems fine.

Xfce4-screensaver wasn't in bullseye so I had an old locally compiled version installed, which may have been the cause of some video problems. Replaced with the debian build.

A broken bash completion script I had removed came back and was annoying until I remembered what I'd done.

Old searx install didn't work, neither did latest searxng install script from git. Too many python errors for me, so I gave up and ran the docker container instead. That was the only frustrating part.

Skyrim runs more smoothly and amdgpu hasn't crashed yet. It had been getting bad lately, locking up during video playback sometimes (maybe once a week) in the past month or two. I think perhaps running the newest kernels with the old mesa was a bad combination.

I ran out of disk space on the EFI partition during install, but it recovered no problem.

Other than that no problems so far.

 

They're talking about closing the main support office for the Mauna Loa Observatory — which is "recognised as the birthplace of global carbon dioxide monitoring and maintains the world's longest record of measurements of atmospheric CO2."

 

Changelog once again didn't make it to nexus but it looks fairly substantial.

 

The carbon dioxide (CO2) spewing from human activities is not only changing Earth’s atmosphere, it’s also rapidly acidifying the planet’s oceans. In 50 years, that acidification could reduce the oceans’ ability to absorb CO2 by 10% as it takes a toll on phytoplankton

... Nevertheless, it’s still too early to conclude that the projected declines in phytoplankton will inevitably reduce CO2 uptake by the world’s oceans, Church and others caution. It’s still possible the declines could be offset by higher plankton growth rates at high latitudes and other global processes involved in carbon cycling. However, Church says, “It certainly doesn’t help.”

 

Are we selling your data? Who can say, really? What does "selling" even mean? We'll just need you to agree to new some terms of use to be sure we can get away with whatever it is we'll be doing. Don't worry about it!

#firefox

view more: next ›