Kagi was founded as an AI company so this is not surprising. I unsubscribed from them after learning that. Also, their CEO is a weirdo who harasses people critical of their product and he thinks the GDPR is optional.
Kagi was founded as an AI company so this is not surprising. I unsubscribed from them after learning that. Also, their CEO is a weirdo who harasses people critical of their product and he thinks the GDPR is optional.
But this is literally how federation works. Not everybody subscribes every single Linux community.
Only way to find out is to try it. Something like Club Penguin shouldn’t give you much trouble especially if you use a launcher like Lutris.
I don’t even own one and it convinced me.
I am using a immutable Fedora since January and it has been great so far.
Ok, and yet you still practically can’t buy anything but drugs with your crypto coins. They are also valued in ‘proprietary money’. Even in the unlikely event that privacy friendly crypto currencies catch on, regulations will make these either completely illegal or their use will require KYC verification as is already the case for normal transactions. As I keep saying, whether we like it or not technological solutions are worthless for political problems. You can’t code your way around a boot to your face.
Well, do it harder then. Ponzi coin isn’t a solution either.
The solution is to vote for privacy preserving policies. The only thing tech will do is taking your money while promising something that is impossible to implement, leaving you with nothing. Technological solutions are fundamentally ill suited to solving this issue.
So you are buying your groceries with that ponzi coin? Besides, if cash is made illegal cryptocurrencies are definitely also illegal and no legitimate business will accept them.
Your ponzi scheme won’t save you then. There are no technical solutions to a purely political problem.
“Everybody who disagrees with me is a bot.”
Spoken like a true bagholder. Cryptocurrencies are a ponzi scheme.
Is this the rage baiting flavour of the month? Is the next step complaining that they spent it all on “the rainbow people”? The Linux Foundation supports lots of open source projects and 8 million dollars on kernel development alone is a lot.
Haters aren’t worth listening to. Doesn’t matter if it is flatpak, systemd, wayland, or whatever else. These people have no interest in a discussion about merits and drawbacks of a given solution. They just want to be angry about something.
Neat, but sad to see that it is permissively licensed.
What is your threat model? If you don’t want to give any data to these companies you simply can’t interact with them at all. Where do you draw the line? Once you have figured that out you can come up with a plan.
One thing you probably should always do is separating your business devices from your personal devices. Then create the accounts you need for your business and only use them with your work laptop or phone. If you want, you can invent a sockpuppet persona that acts as your social media manager. This should insulate your personal life from most tracking as long as you don’t use your work laptop for things unrelated to work. I wouldn’t fuss around too much with privacy preserving apps for a business accounts outside of ad-blocking and regularly cleaning up cookies.
‘Dead rop’ is a really dumb name.