• rglullis@communick.newsOP
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    7 months ago

    Also, perhaps if we learn to value servers, so not treat them as mere relays, perhaps we’ll be able to teach value and independence.

    If you want to be independent, the only thing that matters is the ability to able to roam around and port our identity and data wherever we want. Where you are doing your computing doesn’t really matter.

    government schemes to repurpose old computers into mini servers and that governments should give everyone a domain like NAME.TOWN.CITY and everyone can run a personal server and get used to it and then they can grow from there.

    We don’t need any of that. Computing power and storage is so cheap nowadays that even people in middle-income areas can afford to collect piles of used smartphones on their desk drawers. If there was any type of economic demand for what you are saying, we would have seen by now some company trying to make a business out of it.

    • sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al
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      7 months ago

      Computing power and storage is so cheap nowadays that even people in middle-income areas can afford to collect piles of used smartphones on their desk drawers.

      I think that’s a dangerous assumption to make. Not everyone is as well off as ourselves. Some people can’t even afford a desk, let alone have a desk drawer full of old phones.

      • rglullis@communick.newsOP
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        7 months ago
        1. On average, we are rich enough to have plenty of gadgets around.

        2. Those in extreme poverty need access to more important things than access to these gadgets.

        • biddy@feddit.nl
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          7 months ago
          1. Those in extreme poverty need access to more important things than access to these gadgets.

          We’re going down a sidetrack here but this is just false. A smartphone these days is a ticket to many things required to live. Applying for jobs, applying for government services, buying essential items cheaply, cheap/free education.

          • rglullis@communick.newsOP
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            7 months ago

            Applying for jobs, applying for government services, buying essential items cheaply, cheap/free education.

            None of these things are even close to be available to people in extreme poverty.

            Think “no access to running water or sewage systems” levels of poverty, not “living in a ghetto area of an European or North American country”.