Is there a link that doesn’t use bluesky? It’s been dead for hours to me
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undu@discuss.tchncs.deto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•cal.com compatible ics calendar or alternative booking suite?English
1·1 month agoYou might want to take a look at https://github.com/olivierlambert/calrs
it was made as a reaction to cal.com not meeting the needs of the creator, like being selfhood table and being caldav compatible.
Note that I cannot vouch for it since I have not used it.
undu@discuss.tchncs.deto
Pulse of Truth@infosec.pub•Certbot and Let's Encrypt Now Support IP Address CertificatesEnglish
6·2 months agoI wholeheartedly disagree, DNS needs servers running, which can go down or their configuration break, this makes it less reliable for certain use cases where reliability is of the essence.
For example, I’m a maintainer of a server virtualization platform, where communication between hosts is done using IP only because DNS is simply not reliable enough, this means having to use IPs as subjects.
undu@discuss.tchncs.deto
Technology@lemmy.world•Apple brings age verification to UK users in iOS 26.4 beta - Users who don’t verify their age may not be able to download or purchase apps.English
21·2 months agoThe scheme from the Danish government, shared in another comment, avoids the sharing by allowing token to be used only once, and, because the government issues the tokens, it can block people from getting tokens if they detect abuse. This can be done by rate-limiting, geoblocking and all sorts of techniques.
Remember that the function of the anonymous token is to not allow the service provider (like an OS, or a a website) to see your identity. This still allows the government to see which service provider you are using.
Hopefully the service provider can form pools yo block the government from knowing each individual website, but that’s not a given.
undu@discuss.tchncs.deto
Technology@lemmy.world•Colorado proposing Bill to move age verification to Operating System rather than web siteEnglish
13·3 months agoAs a software engineer that works on virtualization and is interested in software freedom, this law terrifies me because it’s a trojan horse for something much much worse than the already shitty status quo: remote attestation.
And I will tell you this: the operating system is 100% where you want to do age verification
No, it’s the last place you want to do this check. Let me explain: because users control the PCs they buy right now, meaning they can install any OS and programa the so wish to install; governments at some point will decide that they cannot trust the results given by any OS.
The only way for governments will be to actually trust third parties (again) that will check properties in your computer through a module that controls the whole computer and users don’t have access to.
This is called remote attestation: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2023/08/your-computer-should-say-what-you-tell-it-say-1
With this technology, users don’t decide what programa they can install and run, they can’t even decide what websites can they visit.
It’s a brutal encroachment on the computer freedom you have enjoyed up to now, and the perfect tool for an authoritarian government to enforce what can you watch and in general, can do with your computer.
If this law is approved, I guarantee you it will spread and will have expanded versions requiring remote attestation. (Don’t worry, lobbyists will find a way to sell remote attestation preserves privacy to make it go down easier)
The end result is a nightmare-fueling scenario where someone like Peter Thiel through Persona not only has your information because it needed to verify to create the account in your computer, but Microsoft also has it, and governments through Microsoft may decide to limit which platforms you can access (X or something worse), if also if you’ve been a bad citizen, if you can run programs in any computer that can be legally sold.
All in all, this law is incredibly dangerous in the current political climate where even supposedly democratic governments are pushing for more authoritarian controls to digital life. And I’m surprised organisations like EFF haven’t seen this yet
undu@discuss.tchncs.deto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Under British and UK Legislation anyone using or developing end-to-end encryption is now a “hostile actor”
2·3 months agoI understand that in a system with clients and servers having encrypted communications between the server and the clients is not enough to have end-to-end encryption.
Even then I find it strange to cobsider TLS not end-to-end, the whole gist of TLS is enabling confidential communications between 2 network nodes without any of the intermediate nodes participating in the communication being able to decrypt the data.
Of the ones I’ve tried that are fully open-source, zulip is the best one regarding UX functionality.
I’ve found Matrix is a UX nightmare, with many different clients implementing different features, or having issues if a non-default login mode is used, ending in people getting locked out after the browser logged them out because they forgot to copy a key when they were logged in.
Others like rocketchat are opencore like matter most, which means they can do the switcheroo.
The things I would care the most when checking this kind of service are:
- UX: how easy it is to use for nontechnical users
- how well-backed is the project, socially and financially, to ensure it lasts a long time
- how easy it is to get the (public) conversations out, as an exit strategy, if the one above isn’t looking so good.
undu@discuss.tchncs.deto
Technology@lemmy.world•AI controls is coming to FirefoxEnglish
161·3 months agoWhat’s not changing though is that most of their focus will be on integrating AI which most people don’t want.
I agree that AI chatbots are absolutely useless and have no place in a browser, but out of the three ML features in the screenshot, one is great for blind people, and another one is great for making the web more multilingual, so their usefulness is quite self-evident. Regarding ethics, at least for the last one it’s using a local model, and was trained using open-source datasets.[1]
What makes so-called “AI” bad is not the amount of users that can benefit from it, but how useful it is to the people that do use the feature, which usually means having experts tailor machine learning unto a single purpose.
I personally use the translation feature at least once a week when looking at news article that are not in English, and now I’m using a lot to translate Japanese webpages to plan a holiday there, so I’m very happy that Mozilla has invested time abd collaborated with universities to make this feature, I wish other people were less flippant about it just because it has “AI” in its name.
[1] https://hacks.mozilla.org/2022/06/training-efficient-neural-network-models-for-firefox-translations/
But you see, it’s not buses or trains that do the same, it’s limousines. It’s the air of exclusivity that the self-driving car-manufacturers sell, people like to feel special and don’t want to spend time with the riffraff, even if it means they themselves become serfs to the technology companies.
undu@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux@lemmy.world•From Microsoft to Microslop to Linux: Why I Made the SwitchEnglish
2·3 months agoActually, scratch that, I think it really started with the non-consensual updates:
At first I ignored it, and carried on as normal. Sure, I’d get mad from time to time and I’d complain.
But hey, nothing beats the convenience of being able to have all of your applications in one place
It really started there for me as well, and where it ended: Windows 10 was hellbent on making me use newer, broken GPU drivers. So it was better to lose the ability to play some games rather than all of them. And I also was able to get all the updates from one place :)
pd: at the time this happened Microsoft still hadn’t released the tool to allow to rollback drivers.
undu@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Is anyone planning on forking Plasma to restore X11 support when it is dropped?
322·4 months agoI’ve used Wayland exclusively for years, but here’s an example: https://michael.stapelberg.ch/posts/2026-01-04-wayland-sway-in-2026/
tl;Dr the Wayland ecosystem has still not caught up in all edge cases, the weirder setup you have the more likely you’re affected
Vates demoed on kubecon an ARM workstation running XCP-ng, a xen-based virtualization platform.
https://xcp-ng.org/blog/2025/11/13/xcp-ng-on-arm-with-ampere/
It’s still early days, but I’m hoping it can reach homelabs, the big question being hardware enablement, which is difficult on ARM baseboards due to lack of standardization.
Disclaimer: I work with Vates, and prepared some component to compile under ARM to prepare the demo.
undu@discuss.tchncs.deto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Simplify home hardware for selfhostingEnglish
2·8 months agoI know, yes. But I’m talking about virtualization, not containerizarion
undu@discuss.tchncs.deto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Simplify home hardware for selfhostingEnglish
2·8 months agoPersonally, I want to properly isolate the services with virtualization. The main reason is I expose some of the services online, and I don’t t want to only rely on keeping all software up-to-date at all times. This allows me to limit the damage if one of the services is compromised.
I wouldn’t use MacOS as the virtualization platform, and instead use something else, like BSD, Linux, or xen-based for my servers
undu@discuss.tchncs.deto
BuyFromEU@feddit.org•Fairphone announces the €599 Fairphone 6, with a 6.31" 120Hz LTPO OLED display, a Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 chip, and enhanced modularity with 12 swappable partsEnglish
14·11 months agoEU law makes it a requirement to provide updates since a company stops selling the device. So they better fix it or they will be sued.
https://energy-efficient-products.ec.europa.eu/product-list/smartphones-and-tablets_en
undu@discuss.tchncs.deto
Android@lemdro.id•Nothing Phone (3) will have 7 years of software supportEnglish
23·11 months agoIsn’t that the bare minimum mandated by the EU?
undu@discuss.tchncs.deto
Technology@lemmy.world•Synology Lost the Plot with Hard Drive Locking Move - ServeTheHomeEnglish
33·1 year agoDid Synology just hire some brain dead Broadcom executive?
Well, Citrix’s CEO was Broadcom’ software boss
And also hasa place at the US treasury, he’s DOGE-affiliated as well: https://www.crn.com/news/cloud/2025/citrix-parent-ceo-krause-on-doge-role-we-re-applying-public-company-standards-to-the-federal-government
undu@discuss.tchncs.deto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Performance comparison between various HypervisorsEnglish
27·1 year agoXcp-ng might have the edge against bare metal because Windows uses virtualization by default uses Virtualization-Based Security (VBS). Under xcp-ng it can’t use that since nested virtualization can’t be enabled.
Disclaimer: I’m a maintainer of the control plane used by xcp-ng
undu@discuss.tchncs.deto
Technology@lemmy.world•Italy to require VPN and DNS providers to block pirated contentEnglish
5·1 year agoBut the individual network packets are usually at most 1500 byes long, and applications encrypt the content. Hashing doesn’t prevent jack squat. It’s more likely to be DNS + IP blocks


Works on Linux wirelessly, at least on the steam deck.