in reply to Ned Yeung

I have used the contact link in the email.

"You recently sent me an email announcing a new Liberal cabinet.

However, your link sent me to your X post, which is NOT a public post accessible publicly by the Canadians who would want to read it.

I, along with many other conscientious Canadians, have deleted our accounts off Twitter (mine was over 14 years old) or later X, because of the incredible data insecurity created by Musk, and hostile anti-humanitarian environment under Musk. It is incredibly irresponsible for our government to make public announcements on such a platform.

Regards,
Ned Yeung,
A Concerned Public Citizen of Canada"

This entry was edited (7 months ago)

Just further proof than gop and Texas doesn't actually believe in free markets and deregulation.

> geekdom.social/users/Fantastic…

Deve ter ouvido umas verdades e sentiu-se mal. Ele é fraco, não lida bem com isso.
noticiasaominuto.com/politica/…

FBI Warning on Messaging Apps
The FBI urges Americans to ditch SMS for encrypted apps—then demands backdoors via “responsible encryption.”

Big Tech resists.

Law enforcement wants access.

There’s another way:

Purism’s Librem 5 & Liberty Phone

✅ USA-made
✅ No Google/Apple OS
✅ Hardware kill switches
✅ Open-source PureOS
✅ Lifetime security updates
✅ Supports Matrix, Jami & more

Don’t just switch apps. Change the platform.

Read More Here: puri.sm/posts/fbi-raises-alarm…

in reply to Purism

Be careful of anything those snakes say! No offense to actual snakes.

The FBI is scared they can no longer spy on and control people: They've been propagating horror stories about crimes (especially against children) being caused by the internet, to scare everyone into giving up even the right to have private and secure communications. As they don't get their way they're going to ramp up the fear campaign, knowing there's always a supply of people who will fall for it.

in reply to inclementimmigrant

Just so these dipshits know, I’m already feeling the cuts to Medicare/Medicaid staffing and services.

I live in the US and rely on Medicare because I’m fully disabled, to the point of being homebound.

Apparently the division that deals with remote visiting technology has been cut, so they can’t legally fill my prescriptions anymore unless I physically travel nearly an hour to their office every 3 months to remain eligible, and my doctor can’t legally renew medications that I’ve been on for 20 years. Within a couple of months I’ll have to stop taking all of my long term maintenance meds because I cannot travel to their office.

This will remove all my quality of life and will kill me slowly. I don’t want to die slowly of neglect, so I’ve got a decision to make, and I’m putting it off because I really don’t want to die yet.

I don’t know what to say except I have a name. I’m Lilly Piper. I’m a very good user experience designer, a pretty good writer, and decent friend.

We’re not faceless or nameless. I just want someone to remember that there are names behind these policies.

I’m good at sewing; I make period correct corsets from the 1800s and before (proof and more proof).

I’m actually great at sewing. I do embroidery and am a great listener. I’m also a good writer and editor. I didn’t need to die like this, but I won’t be homeless again, and I won’t beg in the streets for medicine. I just won’t.

e: links

This entry was edited (7 months ago)

Manual testing with a screen reader will help you catch and fix accessibility issues that can't be identified by automated tests. Sara Soueidan has a great guide on various screen readers and how to set them up on your computer.

sarasoueidan.com/blog/testing-…

Starting today, photos you share to pixelfed.social* may look brighter or more vibrant, as we now preserve ICC color profiles 🥳

* - Avail to any pixelfed server running github.com/pixelfed/pixelfed/c…

#pixelfed

Specifically the petition to ban conversion therapy practices is lacking enough votes from:
- #germany (49.9%)
- #sweden (49.96%)
- #Netherlands (94%)
- #austria (25.5%)
- #Slovenia (83.14%)
- #portugal (24.46%)

If you're a citizen of these countries you can help advance a ban on conversion therapy practices by voting at:

eci.ec.europa.eu/043/public/#/…

This entry was edited (7 months ago)

reshared this

You think you know the story of VoiceOver? Think again.
Apple’s bold move changed accessibility forever—and most people don’t even know how it happened.
🔗 doubletaponair.com/

Neither Simple, nor Intelligent parking system for disabled drivers.

So, you park, get into your wheelchair, wheel yourself 100m to the building where the scanner is (inside the Medical Centre), scan your badge, wheel yourself 100m back to the car, return the badge, wheel yourself 100m back to the Medical Centre for your appointment.

Could it be ANY more disabled unfriendly?
#stupidity #disability #DisabilityInclusion #medical #commonsense

I was cleaning out my desk, and I found a mystery thing. It's a thing that generates numbers, probably as two factor codes. But I have no idea what the codes are for, where I got the thing, who made the thing, or if I can somehow reset the thing or do anything else with it. Based on where I found it, the thing has to be at least four years old, if not older. Being a blind person, I of course recorded the thing. Do you have any advice about what I could do with my mysterious thing other than throwing it out?
in reply to 🇨🇦Samuel Proulx🇨🇦

Yeah its super frustrating isn't it? My device did something similar and there was no way to reset it other than getting a new one. The devices given out to sighted people were tiny in comparison and had non replaceable batteries. When my device expired in 2019 I got it replaced with a phone token as it was the right thing to do. If I remember correctly the token comes from the factory with a specific shelf life of 5 years.
in reply to Sean Randall

I used to have a device very similar to this for a job. It was a SecureID token generator from either RSA or SafeNet. The end of life means that the codes are probably useless at the remote end and the only thing you can do is throw the device away. I'm not sure whether its still fashionable to give out these hardware tokens, I haven't had one now since 2019, everything being done on my smartphone.

Wer #Nextcloud unter #Android über den #GooglePlay installiert hat kann nur noch Fotos und Videos hochladen, Dokumente funktionieren nicht mehr. Hintergrund ist, dass #Google wegen "Sicherheitsbedenken" den Zugriff für die App entfernt hat. Wer andere Appstores wie #FDroid nutzt ist nicht betroffen.
nextcloud.com/blog/nextcloud-a…

The GitHub Copilot Accessibility video series launches today in celebration of Global Accessibility Awareness Day (#GAAD) which is Thursday, May 15th 🎉

Each day this week, we’re spotlighting a new video featuring a person with lived experience using GitHub Copilot to solve real-world challenges — both personal and professional. These stories show how AI can reduce barriers, boost productivity, and unlock creativity in coding and beyond ✨

github.com/orgs/community/disc…

#GAAD

DennisL reshared this.

in reply to cariefisher

First up: Meet Vytautas, a screen reader user who codes in Visual Studio Code. With GitHub Copilot by his side, editing becomes faster, smoother, and more efficient 💪

For more videos please follow along, share widely, and help us spark conversations around accessibility, inclusion, and AI 💬

github.com/orgs/community/disc…

in reply to Sean Randall

@cachondo Actually, it's not, I use GitHub Copilot extensively and it helps me with lots of boilerplate code. I wish it was smarter though, but I'm sure it will come. I do have one small problem with it though for some reason: when it says "Next edit suggestion", it doesn't tell me the whole code of the next suggestion, unlike with the first suggestion it has. I'd like to see where its development goes, actually.
in reply to Sean Randall

@cachondo @menelion As someone who is nobody's idea of a programmer, I don't use copilot admittedly but I do use AI in-general to help me with bash scripting etc. Two of the most useful are running on my Raspberry Pi's and though searching for code snippets could have aided me I suspect, having an AI write the code out for my specific usecase meant that I could look at each line and understand why something does what it does.
There is legitimately a lot of AI hate but on the other side of the coin, a lot of good uses for it.
Tailor-made scripts which might be childsplay for some of you, aren't things I think about or know how to do, so AI has been super-useful in making my wishes a reality. Nothing overcomplicated or anything, but useful none the less.

New bug posted to the bug tracker: TalkBack navigates between keyboard items instead of moving focus out of the Gboard window when swiping accessibleandroid.com/bugs/tal…

New bug added to the bug tracker: Multiple Beep Sounds during Voice Input when using Gboard accessibleandroid.com/bugs/mul…