Category Archives: News

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We need a real GNU/Linux (not Android) smartphone ecosystem

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Someone who wasn't around for the Maemo era discovers how far we've fallen.
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No evidence social media time is correlated with teen mental health problems

Source: Hacker News

Article note: There certainly are unhealthy things about social media, but I think a LOT of the finger-pointing is the traditional, horrible, "Pointing at the things young people do to escape/work around the actual problems in their life as though the workarounds are the problems." We've done a _really through_ job of excluding young people from most public spaces with explicit policy (You'd get CPS called on you if you let your kids have as much autonomy as used to be normal), over-scheduling to meet dubious competitive pressures, and car-centric (sub)urban design. They are facing broadly diminished prospects in careers and home ownership relative to earlier cohorts, climate change is kicking into high gear, they had developmental years in the pandemic... and now there's an increasing mixture of rent-seeking and policing in the online spaces they gather in as a workaround.
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No evidence social media time is correlated with teen mental health problems

Source: Hacker News

Article note: There certainly are unhealthy things about social media, but I think a LOT of the finger-pointing is the traditional, horrible, "Pointing at the things young people do to escape/work around the actual problems in their life as though the workarounds are the problems." We've done a _really through_ job of excluding young people from most public spaces with explicit policy (You'd get CPS called on you if you let your kids have as much autonomy as used to be normal), over-scheduling to meet dubious competitive pressures, and car-centric (sub)urban design. They are facing broadly diminished prospects in careers and home ownership relative to earlier cohorts, climate change is kicking into high gear, they had developmental years in the pandemic... and now there's an increasing mixture of rent-seeking and policing in the online spaces they gather in as a workaround.
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Nobody knows what happened within the MMC Association in 1998

Source: OSNews

Article note: This is some deep, weird history.

In 1999, some members from the MMC Association decided to split and create SD Association. But nobody seems to exactly know why.

↫ sdomi’s webpage

I don’t even know how to summarise any of this research, because it’s not only a lot of information, it’s also deeply bureaucratic and boring – it takes a certain kind of person to enjoy this sort of stuff, and I happen to fit the bill. This is a great read.

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Switch emulator Ryujinx shuts down development after “contact by Nintendo”

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: The fact that the system is _clearly_ "You can stop your probably-legal-by-precedent activity, or we can ruin you with legal bills." is really distasteful.

Popular open source Nintendo Switch emulator Ryujinx has been removed from GitHub, and the team behind it has reportedly ceased development of the project after apparent discussions with Nintendo.

Ryujinx developer riperiperi writes on the project's Discord server and social media that fellow developer gdkchan was "contacted by Nintendo and offered an agreement to stop working on the project, remove the organization and all related assets he's in control of." While the final outcome of that negotiation is not yet public, riperiperi reports that "the organization has been removed" (presumably from GitHub) and thus "I think it's safe to say what the outcome is."

While the Ryujinx website is still up as of this writing, the download page and other links to GitHub-hosted information from that website no longer function. The developers behind the project have not posted a regular progress report update since January after posting similar updates almost every month throughout 2023. Before today, the Ryujinx social media account last posted an announcement in March.

Read full article

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Arch Linux and Valve deepen ties with direct collaboration

Source: OSNews

Article note: I'm super pleased by this situation. Arch is my long-term home, and Valve is being a good citizen and supporting projects they use without coercing them.

When Valve took its second major crack at making Steam machines happen, in the form of the Steam Deck, one of the big surprises was the company’s choice to base the Linux operating system the Steam Deck uses on Arch Linux, instead of the Debian base it was using before. It seems this choice is not only benefiting Valve, but also Arch.

We are excited to announce that Arch Linux is entering into a direct collaboration with Valve. Valve is generously providing backing for two critical projects that will have a huge impact on our distribution: a build service infrastructure and a secure signing enclave. By supporting work on a freelance basis for these topics, Valve enables us to work on them without being limited solely by the free time of our volunteers.

↫ Levente Polyak

This is great news for Arch, but of course, also for Linux in general. The work distributions do to improve their user experience tend to be picked up by other distributions, and it’s clear that Valve’s contributions have been vast. With these collaborations, Valve is also showing it’s in it for the long term, and not just interested in taking from the community, but also in giving, which is good news for the large number of people now using Linux for gaming.

The Arch team highlights that these projects will follow the regular administrative and decision-making processes within the distribution, so we’re not looking at parallel efforts forced upon everyone else without a say.

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Reddit is making sitewide protests basically impossible

Source: The Verge - All Posts

Article note: I've been actively reducing my reddit use for some time now, because they've so clearly entered the "Extraction" phase. Don't build your communities in walled gardens.
An image showing the Reddit logo on a red and white background
Illustration: The Verge

Reddit is giving its staff a lot more power over the communities on its platform. Starting today, Reddit moderators will not be able to change if their subreddit is public or private without first submitting a request to a Reddit admin. The policy applies to adjusting all community types, meaning moderators will have to request to make a switch from safe for work to not safe for work, too.

By requiring admin approval for the changes, Reddit is taking away a lever many communities used to protest the company’s API pricing changes last year. By going private, the community becomes inaccessible to the public, making the platform less usable for the average visitor. And that’s part of the reason behind the change.

“The ability to instantly...

Continue reading…

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Varlink – IPC to replace D-Bus gradually in systemd

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Interesting. DBus is ...kind of nasty... and the result of compromising on a defacto standard after an incompatible clusterfuck (DCOP/Bonobo) because a now-dead third party (Linux HAL) was hitched to it. It's now spread _everywhere_ because Systemd hitched to it. And now they're working on a gradual successor because (1) they effectively control the ecosystem so they can do whatever they want above the kernel and (2) the kernel folk wouldn't let them inject the half-baked kdbus/bus1 scheme into the kernel to work around performance issues and further canonicalize themselves. At least it seems to be reasonably sanely designed for purpose. I'm not excited to see JSON as the serialization format in system level stuff, but I guess it is defacto standard.
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HP injects AI into its printers

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Aside from the whole "This means my document is being parsed and manipulated, probably over the internet rather than locally" concerns, remember a decade ago when some Xerox copiers tried to do smart heuristic enhancement which would cause them to ...randomly change digits in numbers under certain circumstances? We apparently learned nothing.
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NIST Recommends Some Common-Sense Password Rules

Source: Schneier on Security

Article note: Let's hope some fuckers start following this advice, because we're currently in an age of "You have to regularly change your password following rules so arcane you have to carefully construct a password to comply with them, then two-factor with some bullshit third party that frequently doesn't work."

NIST’s second draft of its “SP 800-63-4“—its digital identify guidelines—finally contains some really good rules about passwords:

The following requirements apply to passwords:

  1. lVerifiers and CSPs SHALL require passwords to be a minimum of eight characters in length and SHOULD require passwords to be a minimum of 15 characters in length.
  2. Verifiers and CSPs SHOULD permit a maximum password length of at least 64 characters.
  3. Verifiers and CSPs SHOULD accept all printing ASCII [RFC20] characters and the space character in passwords.
  4. Verifiers and CSPs SHOULD accept Unicode [ISO/ISC 10646] characters in passwords. Each Unicode code point SHALL be counted as a signgle character when evaluating password length.
  5. Verifiers and CSPs SHALL NOT impose other composition rules (e.g., requiring mixtures of different character types) for passwords.
  6. Verifiers and CSPs SHALL NOT require users to change passwords periodically. However, verifiers SHALL force a change if there is evidence of compromise of the authenticator.
  7. Verifiers and CSPs SHALL NOT permit the subscriber to store a hint that is accessible to an unauthenticated claimant.
  8. Verifiers and CSPs SHALL NOT prompt subscribers to use knowledge-based authentication (KBA) (e.g., “What was the name of your first pet?”) or security questions when choosing passwords.
  9. Verifiers SHALL verify the entire submitted password (i.e., not truncate it).

Hooray.

News article.Shashdot thread.

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