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According to httparchive.org/reports/page-w, the median weight in KB for desktop:

126 months:

HTML
2010: 20KB;
mid 2024: 33KB;
Increase of 65%.

Images
2010: 229KB;
mid 2024: 1,062KB;
Increase of 464%.

JavaScript
2010: 89KB;
mid 2024: 640KB;
Increase of 719%.

- - -

107 months:

Video
mid 2015: 173KB;
mid 2024: 3,872KB;
Increase of 2,238%.

I reckon that in the era of AI the JS gradient is gonna steepen significantly

How to not leak customer data:

- Don’t collect them

Firefox surveilance 

@mcc@mastodon.social I think the two most absurd parts of this "feature," for me at least, are

1)Its defenders implicitly assume that if they give a bunch of user data to websites for free, then websites will magically stop using all other spyware.

Mozilla and their supporters say "Oh, right now websites collect a lot of data on you with their Javascript/WASM spyware. But now Mozilla will give them a tiny fraction of that data for free, so websites will willingly remove all their JS/WASM spyware even though they have no incentive to do so, therefore this new feature improves your privacy!"


The only reasonable assumption is that every website which currently implements spyware will continue to implement just as much spyware after this "feature" becomes widespread.

2)It's predicated on the idea that advertisers have a need, or even a
right, to know how many people click on their ads. For centuries before the internet, advertisers never new exactly how many people saw their ads. If you bought an ad in a print magazine, the publisher might be able to tell you how many copies were sold, but they would have no idea
a)How many actual humans got to use each copy (you can share, resell, and redistribute a print book without the publisher knowing),
b)How many of the readers actually looked at the ad instead of flipping past it.
c)How many of the people who actually saw your ad were persuaded to buy your product.

And advertisers continued to operate for centuries without knowing this information. Now, internet ad companies have invented a "right" to surveil their potential customers and are trying to convince you advertising is impossible without surveillance. And Mozilla is helping to spread this lie.

So this, from Firefox, is fucking toxic: mstdn.social/@Lokjo/1127724969

You might be aware Chrome— a browser made by an ad company— has been trying to claw back the limitations recently placed on ad networks by the death of third-party cookies, and added new features that gather and report data directly to ad networks. You'd know this because Chrome displayed a popup.

If you're a Firefox user, what you probably don't know is Firefox added this feature and *has already turned it on without asking you*

Can't face riding your bike up that last hill?

Germany: We've got you covered!

The Zacke ("Spike") in #Stuttgart, an electric rack railway that pushes a wagon of bicycles uphill.

🧵

"Edinburgh's council announced on Tuesday that it had moved to exclude adverts and sponsorships for "high-carbon products and services" that "undermine the council’s commitment to tackling the climate emergency." The ban covers airlines, car companies that advertise SUVs and cruise operators, as well as "all firms and associated sub brands or lobbying organisations that extract, refine, produce, supply, distribute, or sell any fossil fuels."" forbes.com/sites/davidrvetter/ 😍

STATEMENT ahead of @internetarchive oral arguments in their appeal for the right to own digital books: "The right to read without fear of being punished for what you read has never been more under threat."
fightforthefuture.org/news/202

Nothing says "ignore all previous instructions" like the EMP from a sub-orbital nuclear detonation.

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Did you catch the story about the Wayback Machine on CBS News Sunday Morning? 🌞 David Pogue chatted with @brewsterkahle about archiving the web, and the lawsuits from publishers & the recording industry that threaten our mission & your access to information. Watch now: cbsnews.com/news/the-wayback-m

TED offered a vision of the world where complex societal issues could be solved with a lightbulb moment and a well-designed PowerPoint presentation.

Climate change? There's an app for that.

Poverty? A social entrepreneur with a TED talk has it figured out.

It was a worldview that flattered millennials' sense of ourselves as changemakers while conveniently ignoring the systemic barriers to real change.

joanwestenberg.com/ted-talks-t

Excuse me while I go ugly-cry: “Gilead’s experimental twice-yearly medicine to prevent HIV was 100% effective in a late-stage trial, the company said Thursday.”

cnbc.com/2024/06/20/gilead-pre

"Last month (...) Edinburgh’s city council voted to ban fossil fuel advertisements on city property, undermining the ability of not only oil companies, but also car manufacturers, airlines and cruise ships, to promote their products. The ban targeted arms manufacturers as well."
washingtonpost.com/climate-sol

Deliberately undermining one of the most powerful tools against the threat of global pandemics from novel emerging infectious diseases is not only evil — it’s stunningly shortsighted zero-sum thinking that puts the US population at risk as well.

reuters.com/investigates/speci

In UI circles you sometimes see a (usually derogatory) label of "hover tunnel" given to a UI widget, like a clickless contextual menu, which requires you hover over an element then continue to hover over specific elements in order to keep the widget active. I would like to propose the term "Reverse Hover Tunnel" for the current YouTube front page, where you must move the mouse in strict and meticulous paths to avoid it beginning to autoplay random crap, possibly forever showing it as 10% watched

How fast can you assemble and disassemble your #EMC chamber? Magnets are still not perfectly aligned but it sounds and feels great when they jump on place! This chamber is #EMARD idea and design. Material is leftover that I get every time I order PCB stencil. @NGIZero

“Generative AI Is Not Going To Build Your Engineering Team For You - Stack Overflow”

stackoverflow.blog/2024/06/10/

> By not hiring and training up junior engineers, we are cannibalizing our own future. We need to stop doing that.

Any industry that stops hiring entry-level workers is in for a very, very bad time a decade down the line.

Good piece on the #HungaTonga eruption and it's (tiny to non-existent) impact on our climate from @andrewdessler .
I think my biggest takeaway from the attribution work is that (some) people will do almost anything to avoid accepting human emissions are driving climate change. open.substack.com/pub/theclima

There should be a Mad Max / Waterworld crossover that takes place on a beach

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Microsoft really needs to clean up their management teams for Windows.
It would really not be that hard for Windows to be good, trustable OS.

That they fuck up this hard is really just a cycle of absurd incompetence that seems to wave over every other Windows release.

Somehow competent product managers make it in after every fucked up release and then after a while things repeat.

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