Monthly Archives: June 2024

Apple first company to be found violating DMA

Source: OSNews

Article note: NicCageYouDontSay.jpg Apple's behavior has been actively and intentionally baiting the EU over this, doing the most malicious semi-compliant thing they can come up with at each step.

Today, the European Commission has informed Apple of its preliminary view that its App Store rules are in breach of the Digital Markets Act (DMA), as they prevent app developers from freely steering consumers to alternative channels for offers and content.

In addition, the Commission opened a new non-compliance procedure against Apple over concerns that its new contractual requirements for third-party app developers and app stores, including Apple’s new “Core Technology Fee”, fall short of ensuring effective compliance with Apple’s obligations under the DMA.

↫ European Commission press release

File this in the category for entirely expected news that is the opposite of surprising. Apple has barely even been maliciously compliant with the DMA, and the European Commission is entirely right in pursuing the company for its continued violation of the law. The DMA really isn’t a very complicated law, and the fact the world’s most powerful and wealthiest corporation in the world can’t seem to adapt its products to the privacy and competition laws here in the EU is clearly just a bunch of grandstanding and whining.

In fact, I find that the European Commission is remarkably lenient and cooperative in its dealings with the major technology giants in general, and Apple in particular. They’ve been in talks with Apple for a long time now in preparation for the DMA, the highest-ranking EU officials regularly talked with Apple and Tim Cook, they’ve been given ample warnings, instructions, and additional time to make sure their products do not violate the law – as a European Union citizen, I can tell you no small to medium business or individual EU citizen gets this kind of leniency and silk gloves treatment. Everything Apple is reaping, it sowed all by itself.

As I posted on Mastodon a few days ago:

The EU enacted a new law a while ago that all bottle caps should remain attached to the bottle, to combat plastic trash.

All the bottle and packaging makers, from massive multinationals like Coca Cola and fucking Nestlé to small local producers invested in the development of new caps, changing their production lines, and shipping the new caps. Today, a month before the law goes into effect, it’s basically impossible to find a bottle without an attached cap.

I don’t know, I thought this story was weirdly relevant right now with Apple being a whiny bitch. Imagine being worse than Coca Cola and motherfucking Nestlé.

↫ Thom Holwerda

Apple is in this mess and facing insane fines as high as 10% of their worldwide turnover because spoiled, rich, privileged brats like Tim Cook are not used to anyone ever saying “no”. Silicon Valley has shown, time and time again, from massive data collection for advertising purposes to scraping the entire web for machine learning, that they simply do not understand consent. Now that there’s finally someone big, strong, and powerful enough to not take Silicon Valley’s bullshit, they start throwing tamper tantrums like toddlers.

Apple’s public attacks on the European Union – and their instructions to their PR attack dogs to step it up a notch – are not doing them any favours, either. The EU is, contrary to just about any other government body in the Western world, ridiculously popular among its citizens, and laws that curb the power of megacorps are even more popular. I honestly have no idea who’s running their PR department, because they’re doing a terrible job, at least here in the EU.

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Fedora has been shipping with a broken screen reader for nine years

Source: Hacker News

Article note: It's such a perfect microcosm of accessibility (and platform in general) discussions. _Everyone involved_ is using intentionally charged language and being an asshole. Fedora is - alternately - entirely controlled by IBM or just some poor volunteers doing a community project, depending on which is narratively useful. "Patches welcome" is pretty reasonable for hobby projects... but less so after they tossed a scheme that the worked for affected users, and even less so for commercially supported projects right under a banner declaring how they're making accessibility a priority. The old "bad" X11 system is janky but works, but the new "better" Wayland system is so poorly thought out and inflexibility "securitized" it's not clear if it will ever be able to reach feature parity without an extensive redesign that will undercut other promises. And so on.
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Some fundraisers pay >90% of the funds to themselves

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Our culture is _packed_ with fake charitable efforts. Every "Round up your purchase for our corporate tax deduction," a tide of purpose made fraud-adjacent spend-millions-to-make-thousands charities, a large proportion of churches (especially if measured by dollars), commercial middlemen who do fundraising-as-a-service and pocket most of it, "medical service foundation" structures, ... Late stage capitalism is a hell of a drug, everything is an extractive hustle. It's hard to envision how we're going to rein this shit in.
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Review of Linux on Minisforum V3 AMD Ryzen Tablet

Source: Hacker News

Article note: I've been playing with some Minisforum Venus 690 variants (SFF Ryzen boxes) for a side project on campus lately, they are really nice in terms of design and function (but the plastics feel just a hair cheap). Way better cooling/acoustics than I expected. I didn't know they were doing laptops and such, and I'm also interested in a small carryin' around laptop that offers a full Linux environment and also has decent stylus support, so this thing is intriguing.
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Internet Archive forced to remove 500,000 books after publishers’ court win

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: Yeah, unfortunate, but that was pretty much inevitable. The only way it makes sense is if they're trying to make a larger case (socially and/or legally) about the unbalanced state of copyright. Hopefully it doesn't cause problems for the larger IA operation, because it's become essential infrastructure.
Internet Archive forced to remove 500,000 books after publishers’ court win

Enlarge (credit: Tim Macpherson | Image Source)

As a result of book publishers successfully suing the Internet Archive (IA) last year, the free online library that strives to keep growing online access to books recently shrank by about 500,000 titles.

IA reported in a blog post this month that publishers abruptly forcing these takedowns triggered a "devastating loss" for readers who depend on IA to access books that are otherwise impossible or difficult to access.

To restore access, IA is now appealing, hoping to reverse the prior court's decision by convincing the US Court of Appeals in the Second Circuit that IA's controlled digital lending of its physical books should be considered fair use under copyright law. An April court filing shows that IA intends to argue that the publishers have no evidence that the e-book market has been harmed by the open library's lending, and copyright law is better served by allowing IA's lending than by preventing it.

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Phoenix UEFI flaw puts long list of Intel chips in hot seat

Source: The Register

Article note: A buffer overflow in the interaction between common implementations of UEFI - an unnecessarily ugly and complicated bootloader firmware - and the TPM - a security enclave add-on that appears to cause more vulerabilities than it prevents - leads to potential widespread pwnage. I could have written that description basically any month in the last decade.

Researchers discuss it in same breath as BlackLotus and MosaicRegressor

A new vulnerability in UEFI firmware is threatening the security of a wide range of Intel chip families in a similar fashion to BlackLotus and others like it.…

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McDonald’s AI Drive-Thru debacle is a warning to us all

Source: Hacker News

Article note: As I've now been saying for years, my body is ready for AI Winter 3.0. The useless bullshit brought about by FOMO and hype has _wildly_ outstripped the useful advances.
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Section 230 Sunset Act Would Cut Off Young People’s Access to Online Communities

Source: Hacker News

Article note: I think for a significant number of conservative folk that's the point. Awful people feel threatened when young people have access to communities and perspectives outside their family/geography/institutions (read: Church) that might lead them to question crazy bullshit.
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systemd 256.1: Now slightly less likely to delete /home

Source: The Register

Article note: The systemd "You're doing it the way you've always done it! We've immediately deprecated decades of accepted practice after only internal discussion because we know better! How dare you be so regressive!" tradition continues.

Fixes catastrophic data loss, er, bug, er poorly documented feature... user error

Following closely after systemd version 256 comes 256.1, which fixes a handful of bugs. One of these is emphatically not systemd-tmpfiles recursively deleting your entire home directory. That's a feature.…

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Lilygo T-Glass

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Rigging up useful software for this thing is going to be quite a project, but there are a dearth of practical hack-able monocular HUDs, especially since google glass briefly became a dbag signifier then a failure. Would be fun to hook to a bike computer, nice for teleprompter type tasks, etc.
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