🏳️‍⚧️ girl, learning pro gramming, terminally online

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  • 17 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: July 9th, 2023

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  • Luna@lemdro.idtoAsklemmy@lemmy.mlAre we remembered forever?
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    4 months ago

    How much of the data do you think is collected

    I would assume all data that companies can get their hands on. Fun fact, I installed Windows 10 in a VM a few days ago and it had like 5 “do you want to send us optional data or only the required data? Y/n” screens in the installer alone 💀

    kept, and used long term

    Probably until you request it’s deletion using a law like GDPR. Data is valuable because:

    1. it’s used in targeted advertising
    2. it can be sold to data brokers
    3. it can be sold to government agencies
    4. depending on the type of data, it might be usable for AI training/can be sold to AI companies

  • I avoid AI content because it’s sort of an intellectual goo. It looks like there were some thoughts behind it, smells like it, and then you notice the distorted letters or certain writing style patterns. The AI we have currently is not sentient, so if there are no humans in the loop doing quality control then you end up with an AI telling people to eat rocks while citing The Onion. I lose trust in anything when I spot that a part of it was AI generated - without being explicitly marked as such - for this reason

    Then there’s AI’s heavy association with corporations/VCs/tech bros, giant waste of electricity, bias in the training data, legality and ethical implications of training AI on data from the entire internet, people losing jobs, companies running sweatshops of people in 3rd world countries to manually classify said data, the list goes on and on


  • Idk. I feel empty inside. I don’t really feel joy. I don’t really feel sadness either. I just kinda persist. There are things I want to do. I don’t have the mental strength to do them regularly. Or like at all. Usually I tell myself that’s because I’m tired after the day/week. But deep down I know that this is not it. Or at least not the main reason. I don’t really do anything even during holidays. Every day feels the same. I know that this isn’t good for me, but I don’t care. I don’t worry about the future. Society is fundamentally broken, and always was/will be. I just go with the flow





  • Luna@lemdro.idtoAsklemmy@lemmy.ml*Permanently Deleted*
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    6 months ago

    I kinda just accepted that it exists. Governments literally have hardware-level backdoors in most consumer computers (Intel ME, AMD PSP, etc). There isn’t really anything you can do about that if you don’t want to cut off yourself from society. I will still pick low-hanging fruit of course, but most of my “opsec” effort is focused on not giving corporations any data




  • Luna@lemdro.idtoLinux@lemmy.mlWhat desktop enviroment do you use and why?
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    6 months ago

    Gnome. I actually started with KDE. It’s a good DE, but it’s got so many options that I had choice fatigue. I constantly tweaked my taskbar instead of focusing on what I wanted to do. And it was easy to get it to a “looks broken” state

    When I tried Gnome, I fell in love with it. I love the unique workflow, lack of distractions, the modern adwaita design, etc. Everything felt so polished

    That being said, I don’t like how Gnome devs seemingly can’t agree on anything with other desktop environments. And I don’t like how they refuse to support server-side window decorations. Like, I agree with them that CSD are better than SSD, but it would be reasonable to support SSD for toolkits that haven’t/don’t want to implement CSD themselves, right?

    I’m excited for Cosmic. It looks like it combines the best of Gnome and KDE, and the devs don’t have the “my way or the highway” mindset







  • Luna@lemdro.idtoLinux@lemmy.mlTerminal Utility Mega list!
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    1 year ago

    I would add:

    cheat - a tool that lets you make and use your own cheatsheets

    gomi - replacement for the rm command that has a trashcan, so if you accidentally delete something important you can just restore it

    bat - modern cat, with features like syntax highlighting, line numbers, etc

    eza - modern ls, with cool features like file icons

    broot - a different than ranger/lf approach to navigating folders

    mdr - a markdown viewer

    Also, I think you should add a note that ranger should be installed from git because most distros package version 1.9.3 and that is 4 year out of date and has lots of bugs that have been fixed in the git master branch


  • I think the reason is that 1. Linux is still too hard for the average person and 2. The average person just doesn’t care

    Yes, you don’t have to write bash scripts or compile the kernel yourself, but still, Linux is different in many ways from Windows. This is on top of the fact that most people don’t know much about tech in general and often have problems with (imo) very basic stuff. I honestly can’t imagine them downloading an ISO file, flashing it onto an USB stick and then booting from it. Most people probably don’t even know that Windows != PC

    Then there’s also the fact that the average person just doesn’t care. They just want to get things done

    (sidenote: I might sound elitist but I’m not. I don’t think it’s reasonable to expect everyone to be interested in tech, just like it’s not reasonable to, for example, expect everyone to be interested in cars. It just so happens that the tech industry is tightly connected to freedom, privacy, etc. while the car industry is not)