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Comment Re:At least he gets (Score 1) 98

This is common sense and yet we have expectations that PGP will become standard.

This is why I use Telegram and why I've prodded my family to adopt it as well. There are obviously things about it that are somewhat alarming to me (closed-source and non-federated server software, a creator who is becoming more of a diva every day, an increasing promotion of crypto scammery, etc), but it is by far the most user-friendly messaging platform available that isn't owned by a tech megacorp.

If I have something secret to send, I can use PGP to encrypt the message and then send it over literally any channel without issue. What I (and more importantly my family) want in our day to day conversations is decent security, decent privacy, and convenience.
(This is not an advertisement or endorsement of Telegram, ymmv, etc)

Comment Re:Golly (Score 2, Insightful) 69

Gotta tie it into global warming somehow.

This is the funniest contrarian take I've seen today. I could easily respond with "gotta discredit any reference to global warming somehow". Would you have rather they said "accelerates local sea level rise from some unnamed phenomenon"? Are you disagreeing with the measurable fact that the sea level has risen as a direct result of rising temperatures, or are you simply bothered by the term "global warming" because you view any reference to it as some plot to sell you something or get someone elected?

Comment Distributed Web (Score 1) 42

The idea of a "distributed web" sounds great to me, but I fail to see why we need blockchains to accomplish this. Wouldn't self-hosting content utilizing traditional protocols be sufficient? There seems to be a chasm of middle-ground between "everything on the web is hosted by AWS" and "everything you access is part of a distributed ledger that is owned by no-one".

Comment Re:Spotify's a sponsor? (Score 1) 16

Not that i would ever want to defend the actions of a corporation, but I can't imagine they are "spending" very much on this. And I say spending in quotes because there is a high likelihood that any money used here will be considered a charitable donation, which has much more beneficial tax implications than employee payroll.

I'm all for holding irresponsible companies accountable, but this probably amounts to a rounding error on their annual financial statements.

Comment Re:Ridiculous (Score 4, Insightful) 91

This is such a hysterically bad example that I'm honestly not sure a rebuttal would make sense to you. No one is telling Apple to "open up the source code" or "make CAD files for its phones readily available". What they ARE telling Apple to do is to stop arbitrarily forbidding people with those phones from installing whatever software they'd like on them. If you wanted to make a car analogy that MIGHT make sense, this is like a car manufacturer telling you (the owner) exactly where or how many miles you can drive the car and at what times of the day. The problem here is that the company is dictating how you USE the device, not whether or not competitors have access to trade secrets.

Seriously, the inane "arguments" posted to this site seem to make less and less sense every passing year.

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