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"I consider myself extremely lucky to have people that can manage the project in future, and can only imagine what it would be like for someone without that luxury. I can't help shake the feeling that somewhere, the software I use is being developed solely by volunteers who would rather quit, but don't have the ability to say 'no'."
I want to learn more about the https://tildeverse.org/.
Inspired by the work of Austin Kleon and Emilio Isgr, Blackout is an experiment in subtractive composition, as well as an invitation to think about speech, meaning, and censorship.
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@R10T Sure.
https://bellingcat.com — {OS,GEO}INT, investigative journalism, natsec
https://defenseone.com — natsec, geopolitics
https://gru.gq — infosec, disinfo
https://blog.lukaszolejnik.com — privacy, security, tech policy
https://pukhraj.me — security, threat intel
https://medium.com/@horkos — counter-intelligence
I understand none of these sites are technical in nature, but I felt the technical stuff is all too common—just browse r/netsec, if that's what you're looking for. :)
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System76 sound like they are making a nice mechanical keyboard:
https://blog.system76.com/post/625078388641710080/reimagining-the-keyboard
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Just published a new post on how we bootstrapped our SaaS startup from $400 to $2,750 MRR in 135 days without paid advertising https://plausible.io/blog/startup-marketing
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Very little time so just threw some words at a page to see what stuck for #100DaysToOffload
Here's day 96: https://ttmd.grayw.co.uk/a-bit-of-a-rush-post/
Inspiration is all the fault of @freddy , so blame them 😜.
Calm, Private and Healthy, A HEY Email Review
https://dev.to/aleccool213/calm-private-and-healthy-a-hey-email-review-j18
100 Days To Read
> A pile of books has been stacking up on my bedside table and collecting dust. They aren't doing me much use just sitting there so it's high-time I got around to reading them!
https://write.privacytools.io/freddys-notes/100-days-to-read
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Del.icio.us
http://del.icio.us/
(submitted by kome)
A new funding model for open source software
https://vriad.com/essays/a-new-funding-model-for-open-source-software
And the username freddym was last seen "watching TV, eating grapes and drinking wine" in the november of 2007.
I now have the dev.to username of Freddy.
I've changed my handel back to @freddym to prevent confusion. Though the question is: why offer this service if it just brakes things? What's the point?
I changed my #hackernoon handel to @freddy thinking that it wouldn't work. Now my profile is a glitch between me and this other user with the handel freddy. Is this just happening for me, or are others getting this glitch?
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I have a new piece up on Hacker Noon about privacy suggestions for students going back to school with distances learning.
https://hackernoon.com/4-privacy-tips-for-distance-learning-students-g6g3u8s
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@theprivacyfoundation I never understood why I as a user must prove I'm human. Why not turning the cart around, and let the bots prove? Like, honeypotting them with hidden form fields the human visitor won't see? So if that puzzle is solved, the visitor just "proved" to be a bot – while the visiting human wouldn't even try to solve it as it cannot be seen. Problem solved – or did I miss something? Do such solutions exist?
Privacy advocate, amongst other things.
https://pronoun.is/he
email/matrix: freddy [at] privacytools [dot] io