Off-and-on trying out an account over at @[email protected] due to scraping bots bogging down lemmy.today to the point of near-unusability.

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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: October 4th, 2023

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  • The Innioasis Y1 is one of a growing number of gadgets that seems engineered to take us back to a simpler, less perpetually-connected time. It’s an unabashed iPod Classic clone: click wheel, color screen, and all, with just enough modern concessions (USB-C charging, Bluetooth) to keep it from feeling like a museum piece.

    If you’re going to leave your smartphone at home and then take this, and not having the phone with you is your goal, okay, sure.

    But if you’re not, you’re just carrying an additional device to do something that the first device is quite capable of handling.


  • This is due to phishing attacks and account takeover attempts, not due to the platform itself being insecure.

    I mean, it’s not that Signal has security issues per se, but it doesn’t have the German government’s security people with control over what goes into releases, either.

    If you remember the wake of Signalgate, the US doesn’t allow use by American officials of Signal to do their communications because they don’t certify it for classified information transmission and do have their own app that officials are supposed to be using.

    On March 15, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth used the chat to share sensitive and classified details of the impending airstrikes, including types of aircraft and missiles, as well as launch and attack times.[1][2] The name of an active undercover CIA officer was mentioned by CIA director John Ratcliffe in the chat,[3] while Vance and Hegseth expressed contempt for European allies.[4][5]

    A forensic investigation by the White House information technology office determined that Waltz had inadvertently saved Goldberg’s phone number under Hughes’ contact information. Waltz then added Goldberg to the chat while trying to add Hughes.[15] Subsequently, investigative journalists reported Waltz’s team regularly created group chats to coordinate official work[16] and that Hegseth shared details about missile strikes in Yemen to a second group chat which included his wife, his brother, and his lawyer.[17]

    On March 18, 2025, the Pentagon sent a department-wide memo warning, “Please note: third party messaging apps (e.g. Signal) are permitted by policy for unclassified accountability/recall exercises but are NOT approved to process or store nonpublic unclassified information”—a category whose release would be far less potentially damaging than that about ongoing military operations.[27] A former NSA hacker said that linking Signal to a desktop app is one of its biggest risks, as Ratcliffe suggested he had done.[28]

    According to the article, German government information security people do that for Wire:

    Klöckner highlighted that Wire is already provided by the Bundestag administration and is certified by Germany’s Federal Office for Information Security (BSI).





  • So would it be possible for a whole bunch of people to ddos google/other big popular websites ipv4 to ipv6 translation such that their services would still function over ipv6 but make everyone’s day awful if running ipv4. Enough angry customers and pissed off users seems like a very effective way to get isps and mobile service providers to get their act together and start issue sing ipv6 to people.

    Trying to DDoS attack Google’s IPv4 services to get your mobile provider to provide IPv6 support seems kind of…indirect.









  • Children and young people want spaces for social interaction without adult supervision. They will in any case find other places to interact, and companies will develop new services that do not formally fall under the category of “social media”. The alternatives are not necessarily better.

    I mean, I’ve made the “there are fundamental enforceability issues” point myself, but I suppose that for some politicians, if there’s enough public demand for censorship, it’s easier to just engage in whatever theater is required to show that they’re being responsive to public concerns.




  • I mean, Nintendo probably does benefit, but I can’t see how there’s a case here.

    The government does have an obligation not to impose illegal tariffs on importers.

    Nintendo doesn’t have a legal obligation not to raise prices. They, as with pretty much any vendor, can charge whatever they want. You can’t win a court case unless they did something illegal.

    What limits them from doing that is that they’ll lose sales, especially if competitors don’t.

    Companies could have gambled on the tariffs being overturned in court (as they were) and eating the losses with the hopes of recovering them later. That’s a risk, but some companies did do that. They benefited from gaining sales from their competitors. Nintendo didn’t take that route; they probably lost sales, but they also avoided the issue of taking losses on a per-sale basis.

    EDIT: Well…okay, if you could show that Nintendo tried to get the tariffs imposed and then overturned as some sort of intentional mechanism to cause many vendors to increase prices without incurring actual costs to themselves — which I am confident that they didn’t do, but using it as a hypothetical — you could maybe make some kind of antitrust case on price-fixing. But it doesn’t sound like that’s what the lawsuit is claiming, and in any event, what would be illegal there wouldn’t be collecting the refunds.




  • I mean, you will almost certainly be able to build machines that outperform the Steam Machine 2 in bang-for-buck if Valve isn’t subsidizing it, which they said that they won’t. If not at release, then a few years in, because a console-style periodic hardware release model will lag whatever’s at the bleeding edge.

    The desktop I’m typing this on isn’t gonna be cheaper than the Steam Machine 2, but it is unquestionably going to be more powerful.

    But that’s not gonna be what the Steam Machine is for — you could always build a DIY gaming PC, unlike with consoles. It’s an open platform. I had a media PC plugged into my TV with a TV interface card a quarter-century back. What Valve is gonna be aiming for is going to be ease of use, the “you plug it into your TV, plug it into power, turn on gamepad, play games that target Steam Machine 2” thing. That’s where consoles have been able to pick up users that haven’t done the PC.