@prologic@twtxt.net I had a feeling my container was not running remotely. It was too crisp.
podman is definitely capable of it. Iâve never used those features though so Iâd have to play around with it awhile to understand how it works and then maybe Iâd have a better idea of whether itâs possible to get it to work with cas.run.
Thereâs a podman-specific way of allowing remote container execution that wouldnât be too hard to support alongside docker if you wanted to go that route. Personally I donât use dockerâtoo fat, too corporate. podman is lightweight and does virtually everything Iâd want to use docker to do.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de @mckinley@twtxt.net I believe the resurgence in availability of municipal WiFi is largely driven by the surveillance capabilities it offers. Every person who has WiFi enabled on their phone can be tracked throughout the city as their phones ping various base stations; a lot of folks arenât aware of just how much information can be slurped out of a phone that isnât locked down just from its WiFi pings. I know this happens in Toronto, and I was familiar with a startup in Massachusetts that based its business model on this very concept. I can only assume itâs widespread in the US if not throughout the Western world.
snac/the fediverse for a few days and already I've had to mute somebody. I know I come on strongly with my opinions sometimes and some people don't like that, but this person had already started going ad hominem (in my reading of it), and was using what felt to me like sketchy tactics to distract from the point I was trying to make and to shut down conversation. They were doing similar things to other people in the thread so rather than wait for it to get bad for me I just muted them. People get so weirdly defensive so fast when you disagree with something they said online. Not sure I fully understand that.
@prologic@twtxt.net Well, you can mute or block individual users, and you can mute conversations too. I think the tools for controlling your interactions arenât so bad (they could definitely be improved ofc). And in my case, I was replying to something this person said, so it wasnât outrageous for his reply to be pushed to me. Mostly, I was sad to see how quickly the conversation went bad. I thought I was offering something relatively uncontroversial, and actually I was just agreeing with and amplifying something another person had already said.
snac/the fediverse for a few days and already I've had to mute somebody. I know I come on strongly with my opinions sometimes and some people don't like that, but this person had already started going ad hominem (in my reading of it), and was using what felt to me like sketchy tactics to distract from the point I was trying to make and to shut down conversation. They were doing similar things to other people in the thread so rather than wait for it to get bad for me I just muted them. People get so weirdly defensive so fast when you disagree with something they said online. Not sure I fully understand that.
@prologic@twtxt.net attacking the person, not the idea. Itâd be like if you said âyarn is better than mastodon because it isnât push basedâ and someone who disagreed with you said âwell you think that because youâre an idiotâ or something like that.
Iâve only been using snac/the fediverse for a few days and already Iâve had to mute somebody. I know I come on strongly with my opinions sometimes and some people donât like that, but this person had already started going ad hominem (in my reading of it), and was using what felt to me like sketchy tactics to distract from the point I was trying to make and to shut down conversation. They were doing similar things to other people in the thread so rather than wait for it to get bad for me I just muted them. People get so weirdly defensive so fast when you disagree with something they said online. Not sure I fully understand that.
Security alert: social engineering campaign targets technology industry employees
GitHub has identified a low-volume social engineering campaign that targets the personal accounts of employees of technology firms. No GitHub or npm systems were compromised in this campaign. Weâre publishing this blog post as a warning for our customers to prevent exploitation by this threat actor. â Read more
An official FBI document dated January 2021, obtained by the American association âProperty of Peopleâ through the Freedom of Information Act.

This document summarizes the possibilities for legal access to data from nine instant messaging services: iMessage, Line, Signal, Telegram, Threema, Viber, WeChat, WhatsApp and Wickr. For each software, different judicial methods are explored, such as subpoena, search warrant, active collection of communications metadata (âPen Registerâ) or connection data retention law (â18 USC§2703â). Here, in essence, is the information the FBI says it can retrieve:
Apple iMessage: basic subscriber data; in the case of an iPhone user, investigators may be able to get their hands on message content if the user uses iCloud to synchronize iMessage messages or to back up data on their phone.
Line: account data (image, username, e-mail address, phone number, Line ID, creation date, usage data, etc.); if the user has not activated end-to-end encryption, investigators can retrieve the texts of exchanges over a seven-day period, but not other data (audio, video, images, location).
Signal: date and time of account creation and date of last connection.
Telegram: IP address and phone number for investigations into confirmed terrorists, otherwise nothing.
Threema: cryptographic fingerprint of phone number and e-mail address, push service tokens if used, public key, account creation date, last connection date.
Viber: account data and IP address used to create the account; investigators can also access message history (date, time, source, destination).
WeChat: basic data such as name, phone number, e-mail and IP address, but only for non-Chinese users.
WhatsApp: the targeted personâs basic data, address book and contacts who have the targeted person in their address book; it is possible to collect message metadata in real time (âPen Registerâ); message content can be retrieved via iCloud backups.
Wickr: Date and time of account creation, types of terminal on which the application is installed, date of last connection, number of messages exchanged, external identifiers associated with the account (e-mail addresses, telephone numbers), avatar image, data linked to adding or deleting.
TL;DR Signal is the messaging system that provides the least information to investigators.
Personally? Iâd rather a woman owned Jordan Peterson and got him to shut the fuck up.
I donât really like the term âgatekeepingâ, especially when itâs used to describe the general concept of a barrier to entry. The term âgatekeepingâ implies to me a âgatekeeperââa person A who is trying to control if person B can interact with person C. It implies active discrimination, perhaps even bigotry, when in reality the barrier might be a passive issue such as scarcity or inherent complexity. âGatekeepingâ seems an intentionally- and needlessly-charged term.
Letâs assume for a moment that an answer to a question would be met with so many words you donât know what the answer was at all. Why? Why do this? Is this a stereotype of academics and philosophers? If so, itâs not a very straight-forward way of thinking, let alone answering a simple question.
Well, I canât know whatâs in these peoplesâ minds and hearts. Personally I think itâs a way of dissembling, of sowing doubt, and of maintaining plausible deniability. The strategy is to persuade as many people as possible to change their minds, and then force the remaining people to accept the idea because they think too many other people believe it.
Letâs say you want, for whatever reason, to get a lot of people to accept an idea that you know most people find horrible. The last thing you should do is express the idea clearly and concisely and repeat it over and over again. All youâd accomplish is to cement peopleâs resistance to you, and label yourself as a person who harbors horrible ideas that they donât like. So you canât do that.
What do you do instead? The entire field of ârhetoricâ, dating back at least to Plato and Aristotle (400 years BC), is all about this. How to persuade people to accept your idea, even when they resist it. There are way too many techniques to summarize in a twt, but it seems almost obvious that you have to use more words and to use misleading or at least embellished or warped descriptions of things, because thatâs the opposite of clearly and concisely expressing yourself, which would directly lead to people rejecting your idea.
Thatâs how I think of it anyway.
<person> noget andet
BlueSky is cosplaying decentralization
I say âostensibly decentralizedâ, because BlueSkyâs (henceforth referred to as âBSâ here) decentralization is a similar kind of decentralization as with cryptocurrencies: sure, you can run your own node (in BS case: âpersonal data serversâ), but that does not give you basically any meaningful agency in the system.
I donât know why anyone would want to use this crap. Itâs the same old same old and itâll end up the same old way.
GitHub Copilot X: The AI-powered developer experience
GitHub Copilot is evolving to bring chat and voice interfaces, support pull requests, answer questions on docs, and adopt OpenAIâs GPT-4 for a more personalized developer experience. â Read more
Erlang Solutions: Presentamos el soporte de transmisiĂłn en RabbitMQ
ÂżQuiere saber mĂĄs sobre el soporte de transmisiĂłn en RabbitMQ? Arnaud CogoluĂšgnes, ingeniero de personal de VMware, desglosa todo lo que hay que saber en la Cumbre RabbitMQ de 2021.
En julio de 2021, se introdujeron streams a RabbitMQ, utilizando un nuevo protocolo extremadamente rĂĄpido que se puede utilizar junto con AMQP 0.9.1. Los [streams](https://www.erlang-solutions.com/blog/rabbitmq-quorum-queues-explaine ⊠â Read more
This time Iâm doing my commute (to my second flat) with this new 70L travel backpack from Decathlon. Itâs already full with just my work stuff (notebook, keyboard, mouse) and some other stuff (personal notebook, smaller backpack, toiletries, 2L water bottle). How am I supposed to fit 14 days of vacation stuff in there? đ€ Good that I can take a vacation without having to take the work stuff with me. đ â Read more
** Ideas for making accessibility and equity a core part of the software development lifecycle **
In accessibility and the product person I said
we need to make accessibility a core part of our processes
Here, I want to talk about that in more detail. I want to briefly explore what making accessibility a part of core processes looks like, and how that is different from centering access ⊠â Read more
** Accessibility and the product person **
This post is a slightly modified version of a talk I presented to the product practice at my work. It presents a few ways that product designers and managers can help to move accessibility forward. It is a little bit different than what I normally share, here, but, I thought it may be interesting to some folks.
[![Picture of a slide with the title âWhy though?â It also includes a quote from Kat Holmesâ book Mismatch. The quote reads: âThere are many challeng ⊠â Read more
Microsoft Office and OneDrive for free?
Iâm a bit of an indecisive (and frugal) person sometimes. â Read more
I needed something to help with a morning schedule for two kiddos. It highlights the current 5-minute block as it goes. I think this was my first time reaching for JavaScript for a personal project. https://sidequest.club/stages.html
Bursa of Fabricius
â Read more
H3: Instead of C3
[Updated with correct Gemlog link.]
A version of this was posted on on 2023-01-06 but I thought it might
also fit here. Go to my gemlog for somewhat more personal takes and
see what I publish first. IPv6 only!
gemini://gem.hack.org/mc/log/
As long-time readers know I have participated in the Chaos
Communication Congress (C3) in Germany every year since 2008.
Since C3 was cancelled this year I thought Iâd arrange a very small
conference of my own. I would at least try to gather some friends and
acquaintances ⊠â Read more
H3: Instead of C3
A version of this was posted on on 2023-01-06 but I thought it might
also fit here. Go to my gemlog for somewhat more personal takes and
see what I publish first. IPv6 only!
gemini://gem.hack.org/log/
As long-time readers know I have participated in the Chaos
Communication Congress (C3) in Germany every year since 2008.
Since C3 was cancelled this year I thought Iâd arrange a very small
conference of my own. I would at least try to gather some friends and
acquaintances in chat and video conference and watch t ⊠â Read more
Every copy of Firefox is personalized: https://www.ghacks.net/2022/03/17/each-firefox-download-has-a-unique-identifier/
Two Wild Soviet Personal Computers of the 1980s
The Agat 4 and the Iskra 1256. The height of Soviet-styled, Sci-Fi inspired personal computers. â Read more
My 2022 in Review
2022 is over, welcome 2023! A year full of unexpected events, many personal changes and a lot of new experiences⊠But since I wrote a review every month, I just want to highlight the highlights here. â Read more
TIL: gwern has met JĂŒrgen Habermas in person: https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/DXcezGmnBcAYL2Y2u/yes-a-blog?commentId=nhpQK5787tMoaYDWp
Vi har Äbnet en Open Collective side til NÞrrebro.space!
Hidtil har jeg betalt for serveren.
Det er ikke meget dyrt, men det ville vĂŠre rart at deles om.
Den sidste mÄned var 120 personer aktive herinde. Hvis de gav 1.5kr om mÄneden hver, ville vi have et overskud.
Lad os lige vise, at man sagtens kan drive sociale medier, uden at sĂŠlge persondata eller vise reklamer! đȘ
https://opencollective.com/norrebrospace
PĂ„ forhĂ„nd mange tak đ â Read more
This is by design due to Google culture. The only way to get promoted into the higher pay scales is to ship a new product. So you have people shipping what worked before without regard to how it will exist within the product ecosystem. Also, why they seem to die off so quickly after launch. see allo and duo for example. The person that launches gets promoted to a higher level and off the original team and so it is left to wither and die.
Thereâs only one major regret I have about switching from Windows to Linux for my personal computers, and that regret is that I no longer have Winamp.
Introducing fine-grained personal access tokens for GitHub
Fine-grained personal access tokens offer enhanced security to developers and organization owners, to reduce the risk to your data of compromised tokens. â Read more
I heard COBOL devs get paid a tonâŠ
You probably want to share this with everyone you know. Because, you know, youâre a nice person. The Lunduke Journal Community â About the Lunduke Journal â Subscriber Perks The Lunduke Journal Weekly Schedule: Monday - Computer History Tuesday - Computer & Linux Satire â Read more
Tigase Blog: Tigase Instant Communication, Presence and Messaging
What is âInstant CommunicationâFirst things first. What is this all about?
We say this is âInstant communicationâ or âNear real-time communicationâ and indeed, this is about communicating,
talking, sending messages, sending other information, documents. Instant or real-time means, whatever you send, is sent
right away, it is also delivered right away.
Would the receiving person get it right away too? Well, it depends, if the person is online, it ⊠â Read more
How Lunduke handles conflict, personal attacks, & political differences in the Tech industry
Listen now (51 min) | The Lunduke Journal Podcast - September 7, 2022 â Read more
Contributing to open source at GitHub
A software engineerâs personal journey to becoming an open source contributor. â Read more
@prologic@twtxt.net I think those are fine because its just sharing someone elses post to people who follow you. Those people who follow you might not follow the orginal person and in return might never see that post unless its retoos/retweets. The thing that is harmful is likes.
What you can expect at GitHub Universe 2022: cloud, security, community, and AI
Register now to attend GitHub Universe virtually or in-person at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco on November 9-10. â Read more
Tips & tricks for using GitHub projects for personal productivity
GitHub Issues is a core component of how developers get things done and, as we built more project planning capabilities into GitHub, weâve found some fun and unique ways to use the new projects experience for personal productivity. â Read more
The problem I have with the vast majority of social movements, left or right, is that they often lead to projection instead of introspection. Instead of person A trying to decide how person B can treat person C better, person A should try to decide how person A can treat person C better.
Minimizing Liabilities Is Making It
The default way to look at financial âindependenceâ nowadays is to think that means âmaking a lot of money.â
Thatâs understandable.
But then you see stuff like this:
Or this:
It takes until 30 for a person to be as rich as they were when they were born. (And this is average net worth, ⊠â Read more
I just discovered that my phone app (on my personal smartphone) shows me the total call duration of all calls made with the phone so far. A total of about 137.5 hours, which is over five and a half days (!). And thatâs just the calls Iâve made using the phone app in the last 22 months. With Telegram and WhatsApp (and my landline phone), Iâm sure a few more hours could be added. Iâve often heard the statement that smartphones are hardly used for making calls anymore these days. But apparently I can disprove that. On ⊠â Read more
Regina Ip is the right choice to steer Hong Kongâs comeback as Exco convenor
Given her qualifications in the political arena and personal experience in overcoming setbacks, she is more than capable of shaping the terrain of Hong Kongâs political landscape. â Read more
Man in China with no arms shows millions how the disabled can live full lives in videos of cooking, writing and sewing with his feet
A man in China who lost both his arms as a child shows millions that a disability does not mean you canât have a full life, with videos of him cooking, farming and even sewing with his feet. â Read more
Prince Charles says Commonwealth nations free to decide on dropping queen as head of state
Addressing a summit of Commonwealth prime ministers and presidents in Rwanda, the monarch also expressed âpersonal sorrowâ at Britainâs legacy of slavery. â Read more
âSee you next yearâ: Chinaâs âKing of gaokaoâ fails to get marks for dream university after sitting the entrance exam for 26th time
A man in China who shot to fame after repeatedly sitting the countryâs university entrance exam has failed to get the score he wanted for the 26th time â but plans to try again next year. â Read more
Exclusive interview: Hong Kongâs leader-designate John Lee says âI am a pragmatic personâ and âI will be open to everybodyâ
In a wide-ranging interview, John Lee describes his approach to governing, his views of the civil service and the priorities of his incoming administration. â Read more
âGlocalisedâ school-based curriculum at Caritas Wu Cheng-chung Secondary School empowers innovation and inspires students from nearly 20 countries and regions
Caritas Wu Cheng-chung Secondary School (CWCC) embraces âglocalisationâ to optimise its studentsâ learning experience as well as their personal growth and character building. â Read more
US, China talks in Luxembourg may set stage for Biden-Xi face-to-face summit
US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan and Chinese Communist Party Politburo member Yang Jiechi met in Europeâs Luxembourg on Monday, the 4th in-person meeting of US-China officials in 15 months. â Read more
US billionaire Warren Buffettâs last charity private lunch sees record US$19 million bid
A wealthy person has bid a whopping US$19 million to eat at a New York steakhouse with Warren Buffett, 91, in his last such auction for San Francisco charity Glide. â Read more
Google co-founder Sergey Brin seeks divorce from second wife Nicole Shanahan after 3 years of marriage
The worldâs sixth-richest person filed a petition for dissolution of his marriage to Shanahan, citing âirreconcilable differencesâ. â Read more
Japanâs new tougher cyberbullying laws prompted after Hana Kimuraâs suicide sparks free speech debate
Anyone convicted of using abusive language to insult a person in a public setting, including online, now face up to one year behind bars or a fine of up to US$2,236. Previously, a conviction could have led to a maximum prison term of 30 days or a fine of US$75. â Read more