Yes exactly. Thanks for backing me up :)
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Thanks, fixed. Sorry for being a bit too loose with spelling
This is a lose-lose-lose.
- New cars don’t respect people’s privacy.
- New cars cost more due to the extra camera/sensors/compute/connectivity necessary for tracking.
- Less people buy new cars due to increased cost and tracking. Instead drive older, more polluting cars for longer.
Hirom@beehaw.orgto Privacy@programming.dev•Microsoft's OneDrive Begins Testing Face-Recognizing AI for Photos (for Some Preview Users) - Slashdot5·8 days agoWindows 11 is pushing OneDrive and Copilot hard. There are OneDrive sections in many Microsoft apps, not just Office365. Tweaking settings to never (offer) saving to OneDrive has little effect.
The best way to avoid OneDrive is to avoid Microsoft apps, ideally get rid of Windows.
Hirom@beehaw.orgto Technology@beehaw.org•noyb win: Microsoft 365 Education may not track school children4·10 days agoWell done noyb!
Hirom@beehaw.orgto Technology@beehaw.org•OpenAI signs $1 trillion worth of chip deals to feed its AI habit2·11 days agoMeanwhile, Nvidia has promised to pump $100 billion into OpenAI over the next decade, a move that will conveniently help OpenAI pay for Nvidia’s own chips.
OpenAI and NVIDIA’s future are getting tied together more than they already were
Hirom@beehaw.orgto Android@lemdro.id•ICE is stepping up its smartphone tracking, but Android 16 has a secret weaponEnglish0·12 days agoPolice and government agencies can track phones even when they’re connected to a genuine cell towers, via mobile operators. It’s just slightly more convenient for them to use an ISMI catcher because they collect data without going through a third party.
Assume a mobile phone can be tracked if it’s powered, regardless of iOS or Android version and settings.
Hirom@beehaw.orgto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Austria's Armed Forces Gets Rid of Microsoft Office (Mostly) for LibreOffice3·14 days agoThat’s right, the commission probably isn’t involved on those cases. I interpreted “The EU” literally by including its various components, ie the EU commission, the member states governments, companies and individuals in those countries.
There’s no central “EU government” that decides everything. The EU is not a centralized country, not even a federation. Members states takes many decisions on their own, and often need to approve EU comission proposals.
Hirom@beehaw.orgto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Austria's Armed Forces Gets Rid of Microsoft Office (Mostly) for LibreOffice2·14 days agoYou’re talking about a great number of organisations, with different decision makers. It takes time and political will to coordinate and execute this kind of big switch. This needs to happen to become independant from foreign monopolies, but I’m not surprised it hasn’t already happened.
The EU commission decides for some EU institutions. Member countries decide for their own institutions and military. Each country and military has its own labyrinth of bureaucracy with lengthy decision making, and large+complex IT infrastructures. All of this has inertia. And switching cost money, even if it’s possible to save on license cost on the long run.
Hirom@beehaw.orgto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Austria's Armed Forces Gets Rid of Microsoft Office (Mostly) for LibreOffice4·14 days agoThe EU does contribute to free software to some extent. But not enough.
At least 7% of Linux contributors are in Germany+France. An extra 2% from the UK. This is probably underestimated since the source has country info on only half of contributors. https://insights.linuxfoundation.org/project/korg/contributors?timeRange=past365days&start=2024-10-06&end=2025-10-06
The EU commission funded free software via NGI, and indirectly via NLnet. It’s a great initiative helping many small projects, but its future is incertain. https://nextgraph.org/eu-ngi-funding/
Hirom@beehaw.orgto Technology@beehaw.org•Way past its prime: how did Amazon get so rubbish?4·15 days agoI doubt “Not on Amazon” would be a selling point. If merchant have put up with it this far, it’s probably because Amazon bring sales.
If leaving allow selling at a lower price, that would definitely be a selling point. But they would need a solid online store, their own or another markeplace.
Hirom@beehaw.orgto Technology@beehaw.org•Way past its prime: how did Amazon get so rubbish?12·15 days agoThe path to a better Amazon doesn’t lie through consumer activism, or appeals to the its conscience. Corporations, being artificial, immortal colony-organisms that use humans as their inconvenient gut flora, do not have consciences to appeal to.
A great argument for efficient regulation.
Hirom@beehaw.orgto Technology@beehaw.org•Way past its prime: how did Amazon get so rubbish?9·15 days agoThat surprised me. I always try to buy from the manufacturer’s website or official reseller rather than Amazon to avoid such bullshit. Apparently that’s not enough.
If brands selling on Amazon are overpriced, everywhere, could favoring brands that do NOT sell on Amazon help find products with a fair price?
Hirom@beehaw.orgto Technology@beehaw.org•How automakers are reacting to the end of the $7,500 EV tax credit10·18 days agoFord and General Motors have come up with a temporary solution: buying all their own EVs before the credit expired, then leasing those vehicles to customers through dealerships at a $7,500 discount
Nice loophole
Hirom@beehaw.orgto Privacy@programming.dev•YouTube widely pushes AI age verification and restrictions0·24 days agoThe list of “restrictions” for refusing to verify your age include privacy-friendly tweaks that I would consider as perks. Those would make great defaults for everyone.
Ads are no longer personalized
Digital wellbeing tools (such as “take a break”) are enabled by default
Reminders about privacy are shown when uploading a video or commenting
Video uploads are set to private by default
Sure, but it’s still a serious problem even if it’s a side channel attack.
Almost everyone rely on the OS/hardware providing some isolation. People often install shady apps, and browsers automatically execute JS/bytecode from random website they visit. It’s best to have defense in depth, not assume people are perfect at avoiding malicious apps/websites.