Schon irgendwie lustig, wie der Wikipedia-Artikel zum THTR-300 Reaktor geschrieben ist wie ein einziger Roast.

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kernkraf…

Find Ich gut, Ich bin quasi neben diesem beinahe-Desaster aufgewachsen und frag mich, was die damals beim Bau geraucht haben :blobhajmlem:

"Europe can afford to build a browser." Interesting analysis on the why, the how and the how much of building a Web browser to avoid the dependency on US software.

tarakiyee.com/digital-sovereig…


Digital Sovereignty in Practice: Web Browsers as a Reality Check


Reading in Servo’s latest weekly report that it’s now passing 1.7 million Web Platform Subtests, I started wondering: How much investment would it build it into a competitive, independent browser, in the context of all this talk on digital sovereignty?

Servo is an experimental web browser engine written in Rust, originally developed by Mozilla Research as a memory-safe, parallel alternative to traditional browser engines like Gecko and WebKit. After Mozilla laid off the entire Servo team in 2020, the project was transferred to Linux Foundation Europe, where it continues to be developed with minimal funding from individual donors and Igalia, a team of just five engineers. Servo’s progress demonstrates what’s possible with intentional investment in independent browser projects.

As initiatives like EuroStack propose €300 billion investments in digital infrastructure and researchers proposing comprehensive roadmaps for “reclaiming digital sovereignty” through democratic, public-led digital stacks, browsers are an ideal test case to ground these ambitious visions in reality.

The current browser landscape reveals how concentrated digital control has become. Roughly 75% of global web traffic flows through browsers based on Google’s Chromium engine; not just Chrome, but Microsoft Edge, Samsung, and dozens of others. Apple’s Safari dominates iOS but remains locked to their ecosystem. Firefox, once a genuine alternative, has declined to under 5% market share globally. This means American companies control how billions of users worldwide access the web. Every search, transaction, and digital service flows through infrastructure ultimately controlled by Silicon Valley. For societies valuing their independence and sovereignty, this represents a fundamental vulnerability that recent geopolitical events have made impossible to ignore.

Digital infrastructure is as important as energy or transportation networks. Unlike physical infrastructure, however, digital systems can be controlled remotely, updated unilaterally, and modified to serve the interests of their controllers rather than their users. Browsers exemplify this challenge because they’re both critical and seemingly replaceable. In theory, anyone can build a browser. The web standards are open, and rendering engines like Servo prove it’s technically feasible.

In practice, building browsers requires sustained investment, institutional coordination, and overcoming network effects that entrench existing players. If democratic societies can successfully coordinate to build and maintain competitive browser alternatives, it demonstrates their capacity for more complex digital sovereignty goals. If they cannot, it reveals the institutional gaps that need addressing.

Firefox offers important lessons about the challenges facing independent browsers. Mozilla has indeed faced difficulties: declining market share, organizational challenges, and ongoing technical issues. The organization has also alienated its most dedicated supporters by pivoting toward advertising, AI initiatives and cutting their impactful public advocacy programs.

However, Firefox remains the only major browser engine not controlled by Apple or Google, serving hundreds of millions of users worldwide. Its struggles reflect structural challenges that any alternative browser would face: the enormous engineering effort required to maintain web compatibility, the network effects favouring dominant platforms, and the difficulty of sustaining long-term technical projects through diverse funding sources.

Servo’s recent progress illustrates both the potential and the resource constraints of independent browser development. Since 2023, Igalia’s team of just five engineers has increased Servo’s Web Platform Test pass rate from 40.8% to 62.0%, added Android support, and made the engine embeddable in other applications, even demonstrating better performance than Chromium on Raspberry Pi. This progress on a shoestring budget shows what focused investment could achieve, while also highlighting how resource-constrained independent browser development remains.

Yet, building a competitive alternative browser infrastructure would require substantial but manageable investment. Here is a ballpark estimation I made based on existing browsers: Annual operating costs would include:

  • Engineering Team of ±50 developers, designers, managers etc.: €15 million.
  • Quality Assurance and Testing Infrastructure: €10 million
  • Security Auditing and Vulnerability Management: €10 million
  • Standards and Specification Development: €5 million.

At this point I would just round up to around 50-70 million annually, which I’m sure would comfortably cover everything I missed. The proposed EuroStack initiative already envisions €300 billion over multiple years. Browsers represent a tiny fraction of what democratic societies already spend on strategic infrastructure. This calculation proves that the cost isn’t the primary barrier: the European Space Agency for example has had a budget of €7.8 billion in 2024. Europe can afford to build a browser.

It would probably take around 3-4 years to fully build an alternative browser from scratch, less so if it’s a fork of one of the existing ones. Forking Chromium/Gecko or building upon Servo’s foundation could reduce this timeline to 18-24 months for basic functionality, though achieving full web compatibility and market readiness would still require several additional years of refinement. The initial development sprint needs to be followed by a sustained engineering effort needed afterward, for maintaining compatibility with evolving web standards, fixing security vulnerabilities, and keeping pace with performance improvements.

The core challenge isn’t technical; it’s institutional. How do you sustain long-term technical projects through democratic processes that span multiple countries with different priorities, resources, and political systems? Successful models exist. The European Space Agency coordinates complex multi-national technical projects. CERN manages cutting-edge research infrastructure across dozens of countries. The Internet Engineering Task Force maintains critical internet standards through voluntary coordination among global stakeholders. The “Reclaiming Digital Sovereignity” proposal specifically addresses this challenge by advocating for “new public institutions with state and civil society representation” to govern universal digital platforms, alongside “multilateral agreements on principles and rules for the internet” as safeguards for autonomous, democratically governed solutions.

Browser development could follow similar patterns: international frameworks that respect national sovereignty while enabling coordinated action, governance structures that balance technical expertise with democratic accountability, and funding mechanisms that provide stability across political cycles. The Reclaiming Digital Sovereignity’s report’s emphasis on “democratic international consortia” and “public knowledge networks led by a new public international research agency” provides concrete institutional models that could be adapted for browser development. Germany’s Sovereign Tech Agency represents another model for public investment in digital infrastructure for the public interest.

With all that being said, browsers represent one of the more achievable digital sovereignty goals. They’re built on open standards, rely heavily on open source components, and face fewer network effects than platform-based services. Other areas of the technology stack would be far more challenging, and far less open.

Success here would demonstrate that democratic societies can coordinate effectively on complex technical infrastructure and pass the first hurdle. Failure would reveal institutional gaps that need addressing before attempting more ambitious digital sovereignty goals. Democratic digital sovereignty is challenging but feasible, if societies are willing to think institutionally, invest sustainably, and build incrementally rather than trying to recreate Silicon Valley with different ownership structures.

Ultimately, the real question isn’t whether democratic societies can build alternative technologies, but whether they can build the democratic institutions necessary to govern them effectively across the complex realities of international coordination, competing priorities, and long-term sustainability. I believe browsers offer an ideal place to start testing these institutional innovations. The technical challenges are surmountable. The institutional ones remain to be proven.

Views expressed are personal and do not represent any organization.

#digitalSovereignity #funding #internetStandards #openSource #publicInterest


I am so incredibly annoyed by the stupid "Big Five" #banks in #Canada forcing broken phone or SMS-based #2FA upon everybody. It just plain doesn't work. Let alone the fact that it's insecure compared to standard #TOTP.

I've had at least two different financial institutions try to pull this crap on my parents, and each time, I have to call them to ask to turn off that shite because they're unable to send codes, or the codes they send are always invalid.

#banking

This entry was edited (2 weeks ago)
in reply to Jeff Fortin T. (風の庭園のNekohayo)

"we are looking at new technology and adopt it when relevant". The answer I got a decade ago when asking for TOTP instead of the moronic security questions.

Instead they force enrolled me into SMS without consent. And it doesn't work when I'm abroad which is the case that triggers it.

This entry was edited (2 weeks ago)

📢 #NextcloudConf25 🇩🇪 : présentation de "#WebDAV push", une intéressante évolution du protocole utilisée dans #DAVx5 pour pousser les modifications d'#agenda, contacts et tâches.
👋 @nextcloud
#️⃣ #Nextcloud #OpenSource #LogicielsLibres #FOSS #FLOSS #CalDAV #CardDAV #Calendar

I’m sorry, but someone please enlighten me. If I don’t know you, then why is ‘hi’ your conversation starter. People on Meta Messenger have been starting conversations with me this way. And so then I respond with, what’s on your mind today? And they go, can I be your friend? Um, I don’t even know you from Adam! How am I supposed to answer that? At least on Mastodon, people say what they’re thinking.

Also.
Fun fact.

As people might know, I maintain "pypandoc".

But did you know, that 'pypandoc' actually have 2 packages on PyPI?

The regular 'pypandoc' package that people typically install.
And then it also has 'pypandoc_binary' which comes with a version of pandoc packaged - so you can get started right away.

pypandoc_binary, for the first month, just surpassed 1.000.000 downloads in the last 30 days.

That's amazing news.
That means, that the total pypandoc project has been downloaded over 4.500.000 times over the last month.

That's amazing - I'm so honored.

#python #tech #pypandoc #opensci #markdown #pandoc #Humblebrag #pypi

This entry was edited (2 weeks ago)

The Trump administration is set to oversee the largest mass resignation in US history on Tuesday,
with more than 100,000 federal workers set to formally quit as part of the latest wave of its deferred resignation program.

With Congress facing a deadline of Tuesday to authorize more funding or spark a government shutdown,
the White House has also ordered federal agencies to draw up plans for large-scale firings of workers if the partisan fight fails to yield a deal.

Workers preparing to leave government as part of the resignation program
– one of several pillars of Donald Trump’s sweeping cuts to the federal workforce
– have described how months of “fear and intimidation” left them feeling like they had no choice but to depart.

“Federal workers stay for the mission.
When that mission is taken away, when they’re scapegoated, when their job security is uncertain, and when their tiny semblance of work-life balance is stripped away, they leave,”
a longtime employee at the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) told the Guardian. “That’s why I left.”

The total resignation program is set to cost $14.8bn,
with 200,000 workers paid their full salary and benefits while on administrative leave for up to eight months, according to a Senate Democrats’ report in July.

Trump officials argue this outlay is worth it. The Office of Personnel Management claimed the one-time costs lower longer-term spending by the federal government.
It also criticized job protections of federal civil servants, claiming the government should have a “modern, at-will employment framework like most employers”.

Federal employees who took the deferred resignation offer requested to speak anonymously in hopes of returning to the federal government in the future and to protect future job prospects.

They are entering a lagging job market
as the unemployment rate in August 2025 ticked up to 4.3%,
the highest since 2021,
and only 22,000 jobs were added amid disruptions and uncertainty caused by Trump’s tariffs.

“It’s a huge grieving process,” said a Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) employee who took the deferred resignation offer.

“Myself and many others that I know really hoped that we would finish our careers with the government.
We felt very tied, especially in the VA, to the mission.

“Many of us thought we could do better for our clients,
for our veterans outside of the VA,
and a lot of us were so burnt out from the six months before the deferred resignation
that it was actually a mental health decision for many as well.”

Russell Vought, Trump’s head of the Office of Management and Budget, said of federal workers last October:
“When they wake up in the morning, we want them to not want to go to work,
because they are increasingly viewed as the villains.
We want their funding to be shut down … We want to put them in trauma.”

“This is exactly what happened,” the USDA worker said.
“I was scared to go to work.
Scared that the next day would be the day I would get fired, or barred from future service,
scared I would wait too long to leave and not find a job,
and just living everyday like a raw nerve.”

“Purging the federal government of dedicated career federal employees will have vast, unintended consequences
that will cause chaos for the Americans who depend on a functioning federal government,”
said AFGE president Everett Kelley in February.

“This offer should not be viewed as voluntary.

“Between the flurry of anti-worker executive orders and policies,
it is clear that the Trump administration’s goal is to turn the federal government into a toxic environment
where workers cannot stay even if they want to.”
theguardian.com/us-news/2025/s…

This entry was edited (2 weeks ago)

Thanks, Democrats. Yes, Democrats. Again.

Give them real majorities and you get your rights protected.

CA Doctors Can Prescribe Abortion Meds Anonymously Under New Law | Across California, CA Patch:
patch.com/california/across-ca…

NixOS politics

Sensitive content

Beeindruckend finde ich den lebendigen und vielfältigen Austausch in den #Matrix Räumen von @librechurch@kirche.social auf synod.im
Von Fragen und Ideen zu digital souveränen Tools, die auf dem Marktplatz diskutiert werden bis zu Erfahrungen und Herausforderungen immer kleiner werdender christlicher Gemeinden im Raum Glauben teilen.

#ZurFeierDesSonntags

#FediKirche #Chat #OpenSource #digitalSelbstbestimmt

@aral
@joynewacc
Dear all, I am still trapped in northern Gaza and do not have enough money to evacuate to the south. The bombing is approaching, and the army is very close to us, with danger surrounding us from all sides. I urgently need $1,500 to secure transportation and escape to a safer area. Any help from you now could save my life. Please, don’t leave me alone.
gofund.me/4d8ba4f7
#gazacity #palestine #GazaWar #helpgaza #helping

Je vais partager les cagnottes de mes ami-es gazaoui-es, parce qu’ils ont bien besoin de soutien. Certain-es sont sur le Fediverse, mais pas tout le monde. Tout le monde a été vérifié, soit directement par moi, soit par Molly Shah, soit par Aral Balkan, soit par Radio Watermelon.

Si quelqu’un est sur le Fediverse mais pas taggé, dites moi et j’édite mes toots.

Un thread 🧵⬇️⬇️⬇️

in reply to thom

Abdullah @AbdullahSaleh a 20 ans. Avant la guerre, il étudiait dans une école d’agronomie, son rêve était de devenir vétérinaire. Son père et son grand frère viennent de mourir d’une mort horrible, maintenant c’est lui qui doit s’occuper de ses petits frères et sœur, dont un est paralysé. C’est l’horreur, il a vraiment besoin d’aide.

Cc @duchesse

gofundme.com/f/help-abdullah-s…

This entry was edited (2 weeks ago)

In 2016, after Trump had announced his candidacy, David Fahrenthold of the Washington Post decided to investigate Trump’s “charity,” the Trump Foundation, and immediately discovered that the whole thing was a giant fraud.

Trump had spent years soliciting donations from people, promising to donate that money to actual charities, and then spending that money on whatever he wanted instead. The lawsuit that eventually dissolved the foundation and banned Trump and his kids from running a charity in New York State called it “a shocking pattern of illegality.”

I want to emphasize that Fahrenthold undertook the most cursory of investigations and immediately discovered that the Trump Foundation was a giant grift, theft on the scale of tens of millions of dollars, out in the open for decades.

No one went to prison for these crimes.

This entry was edited (2 weeks ago)

⏳A Final Call from Gaza ⏳
We are at our most dangerous stage. Roads are closing, safety is fading, and time is running out.
✦ We urgently need your support for the basics: shelter, food, medicine, and a safe place for children.
⏳ This is our last call:
If you can help, please donate via
gofund.me/334c7485
If not, sharing this appeal or tagging someone who can may save a life.
💔 In Gaza we live on hope and your prayers with your support, we can make it through another day.
#gaza #palestine
This entry was edited (2 weeks ago)
in reply to Mahmood From Gaza🍉🇵🇸

Hey man, I can't even begin to say how sorry I am for what is happening to you and the people of Gaza. My family is following the work closely and it's frankly insane how long this has been aloud to go on. I will see if I can donate, and get others to do so as well. Stay strong my friend, I promise you things will get better.

The world is waking up to the catastrophe, and I really can't see it being allowed to go on for much longer. That of course doesn't undo the horrific actions taken by the Israeli government, but I hope we can save as many people as possible and somehow begin to re-build.

in reply to Zach Bennoui

@ZBennoui
Thank you so much, my friend 🙏 Your words mean a lot to me in these dark times. Knowing that you and your family are following, supporting, and spreading awareness gives us strength to keep going. Every bit of help counts, whether through donations or simply sharing our story. I truly hope, as you said, that this nightmare will end soon and that we will have the chance to rebuild our lives with dignity. Grateful always for your solidarity ❤️

💻 📱 🤖
Bots exist on social media. It's often difficult to know if we are simply having a disagreement with a real person or a bot so here's an article what might help us Spot a Bot.

#Bot #Troll #SocialMedia #Computer #Internet #Fediverse #Mastodon

snopes.com/articles/435482/spo…

ABC reported that in #Maine, the task of feeding people is getting harder because there are fewer volunteers and food supplies are getting scarce. #BasicIncome kills two birds with one stone. Many people would be more than happy to volunteer if they had the time. And UBI eases the strain on food pantries since more people can buy their own. abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/ma…

Over 200 of us have come together as Women Against the Far Right in Scotland and written an open letter rejecting the far right’s racist lies about “protecting” women and girls. news.stv.tv/politics/nicola-st…

Join us and sign the letter here: actionnetwork.org/petitions/wo…

Trans musicians!

There's still time to apply for this studio recording residency from the Trans Music Archive!

1 week of studio time at Figure 8 Recording in Brooklyn, NY. plus $1k stipend because New York.

transmusicarchive.org/residenc…

#trans #TransMusician #TransMusic #TransMusicians

Keep ‘em coming #WompWomp

“MyPillow founder Mike Lindell, ally of Trump, defamed the election technology company Smartmatic with false statements that its voting machines helped rig the 2020 pres election, a federal judge in Minnesota ruled Friday.”

cbsnews.com/news/mypillow-foun…

A burglar broke into a house late one night. He clicked on his flashlight and started rummaging around for valuables.

Suddenly, out of the dark, a voice said:
“Jesus knows you’re here.”

The burglar nearly had a heart attack! He switched off the flashlight and froze. Silence. After a few minutes, he shook it off and kept searching.

Then he heard it again:
“Jesus is watching you.”

Now completely freaked out, he swung the flashlight beam around the room—until it landed on a parrot sitting in a cage in the corner.

“You said that?” the burglar hissed.

“Yep,” the parrot replied. “Just giving you a heads-up… he’s watching.”

The burglar exhaled in relief.
“Warn me? And who exactly are you supposed to be?”

“Moses,” said the bird.

“Moses?!” The burglar burst out laughing. “Who on earth names their parrot Moses?”

The parrot tilted his head and answered calmly:
“The same people who named their Rottweiler Jesus.”

If you use #TalkBack with #Pachli I've got a question about including emojis when reading out an account's name.

Suppose an account has a name like "My name :blobcat:"

Right now the "blobcat" part of the emoji is read out when reading the name of the poster.

Is that useful? Or would it be better to strip emojis from account names before reading them?

  • Strip the emoji name (42%, 3 votes)
  • Leave the emoji name (current behaviour) (14%, 1 vote)
  • Something else (I've replied) (42%, 3 votes)
7 voters. Poll end: 1 week ago

Zach Bennoui reshared this.