• magnetosphere@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      This opinion reminds me a bit of Covid. I live in NJ, and was often grateful that our governor (Phil Murphy, Democrat) tried to protect us from Trump’s idiocy. He actually accepts science, unlike some other governors.

      • ThrowThrowThrewaway7@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        What idiotic Trump COVID policies did he protect you from specifically? The only reason I ask is because a lot of the COVID denier conservatives I have to listen to in my community (deep red state) have repeatedly expressed disappointment in Trump for “trusting the experts” about COVID, pushing the vaccines, or some other nonsense. So it’s interesting to see you express that Trump didn’t do enough to trust the science when I have to repeatedly listen to complain that he followed the science too much. Lol

        • magnetosphere@kbin.social
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          I never claimed that Murphy protected us from specific policies. What he didn’t do was endorse a deworming drug to fight a virus, or question medical experts. That was reassuring.

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            1 year ago

            Did you actually do your research on that “deworming drug”? It’s been used to treat a hell of a lot more than parasites. That is just its most common use.

            This has always been funny to me as someone who actually works in healthcare and regularly reads scientific studies. Of all the things you could choose to hate Trump over, the example you give is one that plenty of people in the scientific community considered to be a treatment avenue worth researching.

            Damn, the media propaganda machine is effective. Trump could run into a burning building to save a litter of puppies and they’d still find a way to make everyone hate the guy. It’s impressive.

            • magnetosphere@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              I did enough research to know that Ivermectin is ineffective against viruses. Remarking on “the media propaganda machine” won’t change that.

            • Raven FellBlade@sh.itjust.works
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              Yes. I did. Please show me a reputable, peer-reviewed study showing any evidence of Ivermectin efficacy in treating viral infection. Just one. Go on, we’ll wait.

              What I do know is that over the counter equine Ivermectin should never be consumed by humans, and that this spate of idiocy gave science way more data than they ever asked for on the deleterious effects of Ivermectin toxicity in humans, including blindness and death.

              But go on, tell us all about how you’re the expert.

            • Square Singer@feddit.de
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              1 year ago

              Worth researching, yeah maybe. Covid was new, there was no medicine against it, so you’d expect any worthwhile scientist to throw whatever they got at the wall to see what would stick.

              But it’s a whole different story between scientists testing something in a study and a non-medically-trained politician recommending the non-medically-trained public to off-label self-medicate with a drug that hasn’t been tested, with no dosage recommendations and with no medical oversight.

              As someone who works in healthcare and regularly reads scientific studies you should know the difference.

  • argv_minus_one@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    The EU Cyber Resilience Act will effectively make open-source software illegal, and that sure as hell isn’t pro-consumer. Neither is all the spooky surveillance and crippled cryptography they keep trying to mandate.

    • maiskanzler@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, it’s always very two sided with the EU. On the one hand it brings forward a lot of progressive and positive change, on the other hand it’s used to “quietly” walk around the local political climate. Political actors push unpopular things on the EU level, but as soon as people catch wind of it, they market themselves as always having disagreed with them. They often keep pushing for it anyway, because people really don’t notice things on the EU level. Everybody only ever pays attention to the national sphere of politics.

      In German politics it’s often the case that high-ranking national politicians that “fail” in the public eye are pushed higher up into the EU level. Take Ursula von der Leyen for example. Too many scandals in Germany, immediately pushed out of the way and now holds an important position in the EU.

    • Nioxic@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      How exactly is open source illegal?

      I mean… lol

      How are they even gonna enforce that?

      • Zpiritual@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Probably the same way they’ll enforce their upcoming ban on encryption (yes really).

        Fines, gigantic fines since people seem to love those.

    • xradeon@lemmy.one
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      1 year ago

      Really? According to this site they claim that “The Cyber Resilience Act should only apply to free open-source software that is developed or supplied in the course of commercial activity.” While that could be a broad scope, I don’t think it applies to most FOSS. Linux is really the big thing I see it applying to and Linux is very Cyber secure, so I don’t really see issues there.

      Are there other parts of the law that ban FOSS? Or is that site too pro EU and glosses over the bad parts?

      • argv_minus_one@beehaw.org
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        According to this site they claim that “The Cyber Resilience Act should only apply to free open-source software that is developed or supplied in the course of commercial activity.”

        Almost all FOSS development happens as part of a commercial activity.

        The most obvious example is of course corporate sponsorship of FOSS projects, but even things like pull requests submitted to FOSS libraries by corporate employees qualify as “develop[ment] in the course of commercial activity”.

        Linux is really the big thing I see it applying to and Linux is very Cyber secure, so I don’t really see issues there.

        Linux does not and cannot comply with the demands of the Cyber Resilience Act. For example, the Act demands automatic update installation, which within a kernel is infeasible and unsafe. Linux will be illegal in the EU.

        Furthermore, no company in its right mind is going to sponsor, or allow its employees to contribute to, any FOSS project if doing so creates the risk of fines. All corporate sponsorship of and contribution to FOSS projects—which, once again, is responsible for almost all FOSS development—will completely and instantly disappear in the EU, severely damaging the worldwide FOSS movement.

        Needless to say, this proposal is catastrophically bad.

  • Flaky@iusearchlinux.fyi
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    1 year ago

    Now if only they did the same antitrust they did with Microsoft back in the day but targeting Google.

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    1 year ago

    Things like the new right to repair laws will hit everyone.

    Most Android phone manufacturers have been sealing in their batteries as well, and Android is 2/3 of the European phone market.

  • danc4498@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    How is it that billion dollar tech companies haven’t infiltrated the EU leadership yet?

    • Nioxic@lemmy.world
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      The “EU leadership” changes every few years, through something called democracy.

      You cant just pay off 1 person

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        It doesn’t really change, the same people are voted over and over and over like in most democracies. To some extend the EU is even antidemocratic, since people don’t really have a saying in who’s the president.

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    1 year ago

    I’m hearing mixed things on how impacted Apple will be re:batteries, since they already sell replacement kits to the users. It sounds like they may just need to make them available to all member states? Not sure if anyone has actual insight beyond reading a headline.

    • eatham 🇭🇲
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      1 year ago

      You need to be able to Open the phone without tools to swap the battery with the new law

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        1 year ago

        You need to be able to open it with commercially available tools or ones provided by the manufacturer. This isn’t to bring back swappable batteries, only replaceable ones.

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        1 year ago

        I would like my phone to stay somewhat water proof. This will make that very difficult.

      • beatle
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        1 year ago

        So we all end up with fatter phones that aren’t waterproof like we had in 2006?

  • Vertelleus@sh.itjust.works
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    What, other than profit, is stopping big companies like this from stopping support in the EU if most of their sales are in the US? Would the redevelopment be worth it?

  • Spaniard@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Don’t forget that the EU is controlled by people who know NOTHING about technology. Case in point: the cookies.

    • Square Singer@feddit.de
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      You mean the GDPR, the amazing piece of legislation that allows any user to see all the tracking websites do and even allows the user to limit said tracking, just by deselecting some toggle switches?

      Incidentally, it’s mostly people who know NOTHING about technology who keep complaining that it’s sooo hard to click a button.

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        Besides this: https://edition.cnn.com/2023/07/10/tech/eu-us-data-sharing-deal/index.html

        Overwhelming people with information doesn’t work, never worked. Do you think the majority of people in Europe care about accepting all the consents that come up when they open a web page? Incidentally they don’t come up when they open the web through their phone application, which is what majority of people browse.

        The EU legislators don’t know tech, and don’t understand people. I am pro-eu like most of my countrymen but it’s absurd not to critize some of their choices, even if they have good intentions.

  • redditcuntsz@lemmy.world
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    Fuck the EU and forcing me to have a removable battery. It’s fucking stupid. USB C was cool though.

    For real fuck them the ass with a hot rod. I do not want your shitty shitty removable batteries.

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      I mean I see what are you doing with your comments… But still what on earth could you possible have against removable batteries?

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        I’m waiting to see how this shakes out. I think all products should be self-serviceable and parts, tools, and documentation should be readily available.

        What bothers me about the EU legislation is that it’s worded in a way that implies someone like my mom (who can barely USE an iPhone, let alone service one) should be able to replace her own batteries. That will very likely result in product designs that are bulkier, heavier, more fragile, and less resistant to the environment (water, dust, etc)… e.g. snap-in batteries. That is not a future I want.

        I have no problem opening a phone, tablet, or laptop and replacing the battery now… you just need the right tools and a little technical competency. The only thing I want is for companies to be prohibited from throwing up artificial barriers to self-service, like invalidating my warranty, disabling OS features or activating nags, or withholding parts, specs, or information.

      • pH3ra@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        “Because everyone is happy with that, so I’ll say nay and that will make me automatically edgy and cool and girls will fling their pussy at me and maybe daddy will come back home”

        • grill@thelemmy.club
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          That makes sense! And you’re also funny and smart, so I’m sure you’ll figure out how to replace your phone battery when all your girlfriends will be doing the same.

          • EatMyDick@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Replacing a battery takes 15-30 minutes, you need to do it every three years and there are multiple shops that will do it for $10. Fuck having a fat phone that’s less water proof. You all are simps.

        • TimeSquirrel@kbin.social
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          Up until you want to do anything Apple doesn’t approve of. Like, say, sideload apps that aren’t in the app store. Or install an alternate OS. Or get root access to your own damn device. Or swap out parts yourself. Or anything beyond being a boring-ass social media consumer.

          • b3nsn0w@pricefield.org
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            1 year ago

            or keep using your device after you dropped it. or keep using the same device long enough for the battery to wear out. or use the same charger on your phone as you would use on any other device.

            it’s frickin ludicrous how apple users whose devices break prematurely just go and buy another device from apple, as opposed to doing the sane thing and buying from a different company. like after my lenovo laptop wiped its own bios on a forced “upgrade” i’m sure as fuck not buying lenovo, but if an apple device encountered the same error 9 out of 10 users would just go and wire daddy tim apple another $1500 for a replacement. like wtf, why would they not enforce failures if that’s how their users behave

            • beatle
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              1 year ago

              iPhones win the longevity wars and have far better software support for older devices.

              • b3nsn0w@pricefield.org
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                1 year ago

                that is entirely because android phone manufacturers are copying apple and doing it even worse, not because apple is somehow good. the fairphone has seven hears of support, and before the smartphone era, you had no issues keeping a phone for a similarly long time.

                apple made this model of limited software support, and they do their damn best to enforce it, by revoking the new ios from their devices five years after release on average, and actively pushing developers to only support the latest ios. yes, it’s better than most android manufacturers ensuring your phone gets slow about twice as fast but it’s still anti-consumer.

                and again, when my last xiaomi phone did that to me, i bought a fairphone, not another xiaomi. buying again from the same company that screwed you over is lunacy.

                • beatle
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                  1 year ago

                  I checked Wikipedia. iPhone is still supported and that is 6 years old.

                  If android manufacturers did actually copy Apple and provided 6+ years of support, we’d be a lot better off.

                  You can’t win the Apple is bad with software support argument, because it is where Apple is strongest.

        • pH3ra@lemmy.ml
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          Sure, in prison too everything just works, plus you have 3 meals a day and a lot of spare time. You just get fucked by some stronger dude any time he wants.
          And that’s exactly Apple: it fucks you any time he wants.
          Want the new OS on your totally capable 2017 pc? Fuck you
          Want to use your warranty but you used an off brand charger onca at your friend’s house? Fuck you
          That would be 2000$

          • sounddrill@lemmy.antemeridiem.xyz
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            1 year ago

            Testimony: I use a 2015 iGPU rig with an i5 6500 and 16gb ddr4.

            Runs well, I can do all sorts of things on it.

            If some game doesn’t run well and I got cash, I’m taking a bus to SP road and buying a good used GPU.

            Cheap, reliable, serviceable. Only 1 of which apple’s products are.

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              1 year ago

              fuckin a how god damn stupid are you? this “green bubble” shit is hilarious, you want to suck Tim Cooks cock so fucking bad you are making up pejoratives for people not using an iPhone, how much of a fucking cuck do you have to be?

                • Killakomodo@kbin.social
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                  oh I KNOW you are a massive fucking cuck no question about that one, you have your head so far up your ass you think this makes you cool, when it just makes you a fucking dweeb.

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      …green bubbles are because apple doesn’t want to move forward with everyone else, they want to have their own walled garden so that people like you say exactly what you just said. their lightning connector is quite literally an outgrowth of usb-c before usb-c was even done, as far as that issue goes its apple trying to go backwards not the rest of the industry. the rest of the industry moved past proprietary charging connectors almost 15 years ago.

      Like i dont care if you use an iphone it’s like complaining that you use chrome instead of firefox, its just stupid. So why do you apple people care that I use a samsung?

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              1 year ago

              Ok? It looks pretty cool. I’m really not anti apple like you think I am lol. I’d be more concerned about preordering in general than it being apple but I’m not going to berate you for it or anything.

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                  1 year ago

                  I mean I probably won’t since it’s like $3500 but like, ok? You act like I’m telling you not to buy it. I have a quest 2 and had a rift in 2016, I am already on board with vr/ar, you don’t need to convince me. If I had the money I’d have had a hololens in like 2016.

    • johnthedoe@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      I think apple is more subtle and long term about it. Microsoft just straight up slams it in your face.

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          I honestly won the last 2 job selections because I was “the linux guy”: my emplyers understood that I can operate a pc better that the average mac or windows user and chose me over other people for that reason.
          So what your saying it doesn’t apply to all use cases

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              Honestly it might not be the best idea to let employers know you’re willing to put in extra hours and hours of work just to get something trivial like audio working because that makes you look like an exploitable mark

              Being a linux user doesn’t mean I’ll put in more hours at work, it just means that in the same amount of time I’ll have more stuff done, or that it takes less time to learn new stuff because I already know how some things work.

              But hold fast to those values and ride them into the ground because of a decision you made 15 years ago and because you think Steve Jobs was gay

              I don’t have any particular idea (good or bad) about the character of SJ, except for the fact that I think he was an excellent salesman. And the characteristic of an excellent salesman is to lure you into a bad deal by convincing you that you’ll end up on the upper side.