European. Contrarian liberal. Insufferable green. History graduate. I never downvote opinions and I do not engage with people who downvote mine. Comments with vulgarity, or snark, or other low-effort content, will also be (politely) ignored.

  • 2 Posts
  • 432 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: June 16th, 2023

help-circle




  • Very interesting, thanks.

    Atproto scales quadratically, […] harms performance AP scales horizontally

    Clearly true. But this suggests to me that ATProto might still work well with, say, 5 or 15 "PDS"s. That is still enough IMO to guarantee a high level of pluralism.

    In a commercial market, let’s say for telephony or cars or web browsers, we readily accept that there are only a handful of players. Indeed, there’s generally an optimal number, high enough to guarantee competition but low enough that we can keep track of the brands and trust that they won’t go out of business tomorrow.

    And nothing is stopping at least one of those few brands from being a “good guy”, akin to Mozilla’s historic role in the web-browser market. It could be run by say, Wikimedia, for example. At least we would know that it would not disappear tomorrow, which is more than can be said for most Lemmy instances.

    I agree that there should be enough space for both ATProto and AP to thrive.




  • I’m not American. The fact is that the FSB is only a threat to those with Russian citizenship or who live within the Russian Federation. Let’s be real: that’s not the vast majority of people reading this.

    I would encourage you to read more than the title of a blog post before you critique it. At least skim around.

    Thank you for the condescending advice, and you’re correct that I didn’t read it - but in this case, why would I bother? The argument is right in the title, it’s been made a hundred times before, and apparently needs refuting 100 times too. There are reasons for Westerners not to use Telegram. This isn’t one of them.



  • Very useful, thanks.

    As I see it, Bluesky is fundamentally different from Xitter and it is a major step in the right direction. It is short-sighted to reject it because of some technical imperfections.

    The fundamental question IMO is whether there is enough mindshare (i.e. users and attention) to allow ATSocial (AKA partial federation) and ActivityPub (AKA total federation) to both be successful. I’m thinking there is. After all, the vast majority of people are still on ad-fuelled corporate social media, with all its internal contradictions.









  • As others have said, there are two discrete threat models.

    Turning off all the radios (pull out the SIM for good measure) is enough to block any proof of your geographic whereabouts. That absolutely includes wifi. Cell towers are yesterday’s news, geolocation is also done by wifi and GPS and your device will be sharing that with a bunch of third parties if you let it connect.

    But there’s a separate issue about what happens if you have to surrender the device. For this scenario, your choice will be between fighting the authorities over the encryption key or presenting a dummy device as your only one.