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@DrBenway
Either one recommend this for all trollish behaviour on social media, or for none. No need to single out an extremist party; there are others.
Also, what's the point of these tools, if not learning and discovering ideas different from one's own? :P It's a pitiable attitude, that of muting everything that does not match one's preconceived stance.

OK, I get that most app publishers can't afford not to sell via the and that are ubiquitous, and I support freer options everywhere (even for users)…
But, come on — this initiative sounds a lot like:
“Drat! We want people who, on their own volition, decided to go for an expensive, unaccountable, closed, locked system to be able to install and use our apps freely! Isn't that fair? I can has freedom?”.
Read that naïve section “our vision”. A vision is something novel. is 35+ years old. And there are open distribution platforms already. Reinventing the wheel.

appfairness.org/

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We think we'll be able to get LBRY Android re-instated, but we'll probably have to compromise.

Good reminder to check out the @fdroidorg@twitter.com version, which doesn't allow Google to track you and will always remain unrestricted.

f-droid.org/en/packages/io.lbr

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@thor
(Not quite: “media hora” in 🇪🇸 means “half an hour”.)
Hilarious nonetheless! 🤪

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@tripu servers aren't "very expensive". having hundreds of people on payroll is expensive. renting offices in fancy towns is expensive.

that's the beauty of federation, anyone who can spare a few dollars can run an instance for some people. if you have more people, limit registration or upgrade the server. imho the hardest thing is to find the time for maintenance, not the money to rent a server.

Chatting with a friend about , and (someone sceptic of the , alternative apps or services, and ways to monetise other than , who downplays or ignores the need to protect data and fight against ).
He points out that even when the software itself is free, servers are very expensive (thus the need to either pay a lot for services or, more commonly, sell your data & consume ads). I suspect that's a feeble argument, so I looked up how “expensive” each active user is to .
In 2019, Twitter had ~330M active users, and reported operating expenses of ~$3B. So if each active user paid a mere $10 per year for the service, Twitter could afford to never share your data, never show anybody a single ad, never tinker maliciously with trends or timelines, and still have a net profit margin of ~6%.

statista.com/statistics/282087
macrotrends.net/stocks/charts/

, tonight I have dreamt of your (for real)… when will you be mine!?

“What [ companies] sell are more and more accurate predictions of our behaviour to advertisers, and as that gets more refined, you really have as close as we've ever come to being a kind of sure thing, where it really works. Even there, most people won't necessarily care about that, because if you tell them:
‘Listen, the thing you really thought you wanted, and went out and bought — you were played by the company. The company placed an ad with , and FB delivered it to you because you were the perfect target of that ad.’
I think the person can, at the end of the day, own all of that process and just subsume it with their satisfaction at having bought the thing they now actually want.
‘I wanted a new Prius. Right? I mean, it was time. I needed a new car.’”

, podcast, samharris.org/podcasts/218-wel [subscriber edition]

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RT @gubatron@twitter.com

Everybody should watch "The Social Dilemma" on Netflix ASAP.

We're headed to civil war if we keep thinking our social media feeds are a good representation of reality.

🐦🔗: twitter.com/gubatron/status/13

To mention in the same breath as is like discussing controlled explosions in mines together with bombs planted by the IRA: completely different phenomena, derived from radically opposed approaches, with very different outcomes; both just happen to be related to the same area of research in science and technology.

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DuckDuckGo's Tracker Radar (list used in Safari's Privacy Report) has found calls to Google on 82% of all sites. Facebook scripts come second (34% of sites).

Google Analytics is the most popular third-party connection (Google owns 8 of top 10 calls).

slayterdev.github.io/tracker-r

…and here, urges the “silent majority” to stop being silent and to face the illiberal mob with courage.
I see a common pattern among the intelligent commentators.


podcasts.joerogan.net/podcasts

tripu  
Here [subscriber edition], #JohnMcWhorter encourages honest #Americans to be brave to stand their ground against the mob of the “elect” (generally ...

That explains why I just got a transfer of $18,160.23 and two hundred boxes of lollipops in the mail from you.

Aaron Parecki  
Note to self: Don't touch your @Yubico key with Gmail open with keyboard shortcuts enabled. Turns out cccccchrlulhrkhlvrnrjfevftinefhuurdfinkdctiu ...

Here [subscriber edition], encourages honest to be brave to stand their ground against the mob of the “elect” (generally well-intentioned caught up in the new religion of ), to politely express disagreement, and to resist the urge to try to reason with them (it's futile) and instead let the petty scandal of the day dissolve by itself.

Listening to the conversation, I was thinking I should extend that pessimistic, if also liberating, piece of advice to my own country () and to other topics beside (, , ), and try to apply it myself — if nothing else, for my own sanity.

samharris.org/podcasts/217-new

Melomaniac like me?
Mistrustful like me of and their use of your mic and your data?
Can't be bothered to keep an app just for identifying music you hear?

aha-music.com/ just helped me find
soundcloud.com/erasedtapes/riv

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