On 23.09.2017 10:51, Miroslav Rovis wrote:

Except with Udoo the *fake* open hardware. Based on Intel x86 processor, as I
strongly suspect.
<snip>

Maybe we should set up a public list of open vs. proprietary hardware,
a big hall of fame and hall of shame. Laud the good and blame the bad.

And librezilla sounds interesting... (Upfront to say, I might only contribute
with testing once Alpha is out, very restricted developer skills here.)

We need testers. And we also need community organizers.

But setting it's home to maillist at google is repelling to me.

That was just a quick start - haven't had the time to set up an own
infrastructure yet. If you've got something better, you're highly
welcomed.

Well, then, if it doesn't involve web, pls. Enrico, make it plain clear to
people they don't have to subscribe to Schmoog groups to participate (because,
i.e. in Beagles groups you can read many figured out they needed to, else they
wouldn't be able to participate)... if/once your project takes off. In case
you, instead, can't, or have no time to, get it somewhere open and free from
privacy risk (would be much better!).

I'm currently lacking time to care about such infrastructure.

I've got a spare box @1+1, which still has to be set up (w/ devuan + containers, mta, ...), but haven't had the time to do it. If you'd like
to help, just let me know (feel free to call me: +49-151-27565287)

Gefährdeter Datenschutz: Firefox löscht lokale Datenbanken nicht

Data privacy in danger - firfox does not delete local databases.

In short: on "delete browsing data", the website's local databases
are not deleted - you'll have to do it manually, the hard way
(rm'ing the corresponding files within the profile).

Nach meinen Erfahrungen mit den Mozilla-Leuten sind das offenbar keine Bugs,
sondern Features.

According to my experience w/ the Mozilla folks, these are likely not
bugs, but features.

Für Datenschutz und Privatssphäre haben überhaupt kein Verständnis
(wundert auch nicht - saßen ja lang genug mit Google zusammen im Haus).

No understanding for data protection whatsoever (not surprising, they've
been sitting together w/ Google in the same building long enough)

But Enrico talks about how they censor people who even come with simple
questions about things (I could prove I was censored myself by Mozilla!), and
he talks more, and ends that email with saying how he has already started
*Librezilla*.

Correct. My fork is yet in an early stage - yet based on esr52, which of
course is just an intermediate approach (I just didn't want to cope w/
the  rust hell yet)

Brought that here, because for a while, Germany was looked at as the future
leader in the return of the respect for privacy, by people like Julian Assange
and Edward Snowden... Alas, hasn't been materializing yet...

The people: yet.

The regime: clearly not. This occupation regime has a long history of
suppressing free speech (people get into jail when publicly questioning
the official hi-story of the 30th/40th, psychiatrized when uncovering
massiv fraud and corruption, etc).

They even recently passed a legislation to spy on basicly everbody w/o
any evidence (network enforcement act), with a small minority, without
a quorate parlament - just like Hitler did w/ his enablement act in
1933.

Germany indeed is ruled by a fascist regime, but resistance is growing.
More and more people are working on rolling back the corporate
occupation and reactivating the original home states. We don't have
anything like the constitutional sherrifs yet, but (especially triggered
by the Merkel's huge crimes, eg. opening the borders for invasion) more
and more police and military people are silently switching sides and
prepare for civil war.

But... unill, and if, Librezilla reaches Alpha, I think Palemoon is an 
acceptable
option. My install is from Steve Pusser's repo at SuSE, but I recompiled the
sources without dbus
(
all my Devuan systems are sans-dbus at this time, something unfeasible with
almost any GNU/Linux distro other than Devuan and Gentoo --but currently no
Gentoo here--;

Yes, PM seems a good start. We should try to get them onboard and create
a bigger community.

---
of google's intrusivity; they can put most any spyware in videos, and I'm
looking for the knowhow how to safely deal with Youtube videos, a very hard to
gain knowledge, very advanced... not nearly there, not even in my dreams there
yet...

How are they doing that ? EME ?


--mtx
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