"Finalmente realizo formalmente la solicitud. Y se me concede. El certificado que me han otorgado es esencial porque recoge dos cosas: el reconocimiento como víctima del Patronato y que esta situación se alargó hasta el año 85. Durante la transición y ya entrada la democracia. Más allá del plazo que contempla la propia norma. Declarando además nula e ilegítima su condena. Una vez que esto está reconocido, ya no se lo pueden negar a otra víctima."

publico.es/politica/memoria-pu…

in reply to Borris

Remember, in which maybe you do, that you're not alone. Hugs to you if you want them and things, and I hope you feel better this sunday and have a splended week. Please take as much care of yourself as you're able, and enjoy yourself through the ups and downs. Finding something to always do in a struggling time is easier said than done sometimes, which is an even more boring feeling because then it's a feeling of when will it end? I deal with darkness too man, quite a lot in factual fact. Good day to you, sir. You're great in my book.

Oh and don't be going like "get Windows 11 and be happy!" cause no. I tried that again today too. It uses clearly 300 MB more ram at idle. It also has more leaks than under my old apartment sink. Seriously. RAM will jump from 2.1 GB to 2.4 GB used, then down to 2.3 GB, then up to 2.7 GB. Processes will go from about 70 all the way to 80, 90 or more. No way to live. That OS quality has gone down the tubes after build 22000. 26100 is that bad, yes. I don't expect future Windows builds to improve this if Mico and AI orchestration is coming. Be prepared for 150 processes in Windows soon.
in reply to Tamas G

My suggestion, with tongue firmly in cheek, is to get windows 11, 64 GB of RAM or more, the fastest processor you can, and expect a fairly slow and buggy machine. Also, forget about privacy and stability. Happiness is optional. The only stability blind people can have is the Windows stability, tagline "your audio probably won't break but, of course, no guarantees". Frankly, I have no issue with Linux being flaky, all software is flaky, my difficulty is that I can't easily recover when audio or braille falls over. With win11, that happens only a few times a year, if that, but you have to give up a huge amount for it.

there should be a linux distro named, flakey flower. seriously. linux is such a shithead. argh. so mad at linux tonight for being a flakey flower, you change one config file, you have one package mismatch. today for example, I was wondering why humanware hid didn't work. well turns out, I needed bluez 5.84. bluez 5.82 had some issues with privacy key generation and usage that made the hid connection flap. oh but then there's pipewire, and 1.49 adds a new weird bug where if it needs to change audio rate, it will just disconnect all audio. great. linux, you're the flakey flower of my life.
in reply to the esoteric programmer

I think, the good thing is that all my homegrown systemD scripts could probably port over OK, now it would be just combing through the filesystem and grabbing them (things like, a script that migrates my Bluetooth pairing keys from Windows to Linux, sets up CPU governors for a balanced power profile, ETC.) I also liked how I had espeakup baked into my kernel with modprobe modules and the initramfs changes that always forced it back in there when the kernel changed. Ugh. All that, lost. xD Debian does configure espeakup for you nicely after install along with Orca, once they know you've enabled them, it really felt like magic.
This entry was edited (1 day ago)
in reply to the esoteric programmer

@esoteric_programmer that is good! I know they tend to get more of the bleeding edge versions, at least Debian could get 6.16 so it's not older like 6.12 from before. I'll have to do some research and get the motivation for installing. It's a bit tricky with drivers for me also as I like to move the external Linux SSD to 2 other laptops, both of which need the Intel SOF stuff, and then this main desktop is on AMD, so in the end I install both driver sets and right now it's fairly effortless to just move it and boom.

I have learned that Luna has joined the Freedesktop Discord. People expressed feeling unsafe, but the admin shut down discussion immediately.

Luna has been passing around screenshots where an unidentified FDo CoC team member discusses banning me with her, and states that they have "a plan" [to deal with me].

I'm at my wit's end here. I have no idea how it's come to this. I feel like nobody in the Linux graphics/desktop community stood up for me as Luna manipulated and brainwashed people one by one. I will be removing myself from all FDo spaces entirely, including no longer contributing to any FDo-managed projects in any way.

I'm sorry. I can't do this any more.

Context: asahilina.net/luna-abuse

EDIT: The person who greeted Luna is not her supporter, that was just silliness. Please don't harass them.

This entry was edited (6 days ago)
in reply to commdserv

CoC is fine as a concept... the issue here seems to be that, as far as I can tell, FDo CoC is all volunteers with no formal training or qualifications other than "seem to be good members of the community that someone else trusts". That works for the easy CoC cases... but not the hard ones.

Source: I was once invited to join the CoC team in the past, before all this...

This entry was edited (6 days ago)
in reply to Asahi Lina (朝日リナ) 🩵 3D Yuri Wedding 2026!!!

I can’t speak for fd.o, but I was in a leadership position on another project where we got a similar case disastrously wrong, so I might be able to illuminate how that happens.

The first mistake we made was not to differentiate harassment from conflict resolution. Most of the issues we had between contributors were personality clashes or technical disagreements that escalated. As you say, most of these have both parties acting in good faith. The main thing that the project needs to do is deescalate and get the people involved to talk again. This is absolutely the wrong approach in cases of harassment. There were two key causes of this:

First, (as you mentioned) no one involved had any formal (or, in most cases, informal) training in how to deal with harassment. Most employers offer this, but it’s rarely compulsory. After the initial incident, I signed up for this training with my employer (as did another colleague involved with the same project). This highlighted some of the things we did wrong, but it was quite illuminating who was there: we were the only men on the course who were there voluntarily. Most of the people were women who were there because they had been targets of harassment or bullying and wanted to understand the processes better. The rest were men who had been forced to take the training because they had been accused of harassment (and, from a lot of their comments, I suspect had been engaged in it long term).

Most F/OSS (or other community-led) projects don’t have any formal structure for providing this kind of training. And the work-provided training wasn’t sufficient. There were a bunch of ‘and this is where you need to escalate it to HR specialists (or the police)’ moments, but volunteer projects don’t have those experts. One of the biggest things a F/OSS charity could do to improve the situation would be to hire real experts that projects can use as consultants. Companies that back projects could help out be loaning HR as well as engineers to the projects.

Second, we had very poor visibility into what happened. There’s a natural tendency for humans to trust the first person who explains a situation. In our case, it was made worse because the only thing that happened on project infrastructure (and so the thing that we saw) was an IRC exchange where one project member connected and had a go at another member then left. We didn’t see the backstory, which involved a load of gamergate nonsense on Twitter and elsewhere (and those of us not in the Twitterverse had only a very vague idea of what Gamergate was. I thought it was a handful of people who were upset some game they didn’t like won an award, I had no idea that it was a coordinated harassment campaign). When a lot of the things that happened are private messages, or in non-project spaces, it’s hard to know what the real context is. We saw a load of things quoted out of context that made both people look bad. We also had friends of both people jumping in and defending them and attacking the other.

It really takes weeks of investigation to properly handle this kind of thing and dig to the truth. And this compounds the problem of the people dealing with it not having the right training. And, unless they are employees of a foundation backing the project, they also lack the time to do a good job. And, again, the assumption that people are basically decent (which is normally valid) hurts when one of the people is not and is actively trying to subvert the process. The evidence from an honest person reporting what happened and a dishonest person cherry-picking out-of-context comments will look very similar. Unless you personally know the people involved (which brings its own problems of bias) then it’s very hard to work out who is telling the truth. This is even harder when one or both people involved are highly visible in the community, because they will both be publicly sharing a narrative and one is mostly accurate (but only mostly: no one is 100% objective when they’re being personally attacked) while the other is a carefully crafted fabrication, but there’s pressure to respond quickly because both are public and the community is full of people who believe either one and are complaining.

In the last few years, the problem has become worse. A lot of CoC complaints now are malicious. Far-right folks absolutely love baiting people into saying things that look bad when quoted out of context, then deleting the context and reporting the remark. They make a game out of trying to get people kicked out of projects. So the workload has gone up, which compounds the other problems.

I wish I had a good answer for how to improve this.

What an announcement from #Telegram owner Pawel Durov! To provide just a few critical notes, he

- makes believe he is just a commoner, and not the billionaire owner of one of the largest message, media and metadata *cleartext* databases on earth

- skips over Global Warming

- refers to "fathers and forefathers" of the Internet ... apparently never heard of Radia Perlman, Margaret Hamilton or Ada Lovelace?

- conveniently excludes Russia and its authoritarian politics from his critique

etc.

This entry was edited (3 weeks ago)

I don't think I'm meant to self-host. I still can't reset my RB5009, which I got, in part, specifically to let family members VPN in and take advantage of self-hosted services. My local DNS server works, but I can't get to local subdomains, despite having an A and Cname record. Because of this, reliable access to the NAS isn't there, so no one in the house uses it. I've tried off and on for years to do homelab/self-hosted stuff, and it almost never works how I want.

RE: ohai.social/@brit/115423522589…

in semi seriousness though -- it seems there's been a lot of people who've forgotten about the twitter thread from a few years ago regarding how to not get a nazi bar.

I think Eric Raymond’s /The New Hacker’s Dictionary/ (1991) marks the transition from the often-whimsical culture of the original Jargon File¹ to the self-congratulatory programmer culture of the ‘90s and thence through stages to the beaten-down cogs-in-the-machine culture of today.

Raymond’s version Misses the Point profoundly, in a way that Guy Steele’s 1983 /The Hacker’s Dictionary/ did not.

¹ dourish.com/goodies/jargon.htm…

Base tech resilience comes from tools that can be used offline. #deltachat apps are offline-first in that you can create chats, send messages, look at messages/media and trigger establishung contact via qr code scans. And you can use #webxdc apps (with checklist, calendars, editors, shopping lists etc) because they not only don't require Internet but are barred from accessing it, providing privacy that doesn't require #gdpr or consent or login.

A few of us are going to visit our neighboring project in federated messaging, the @matrix conference in Strasbourg today. The two projects are rather different architecturally, funding-wise etc but we remain ready and interested for discussions around common concerns and general exchange of what's happening :) For those curious, here is a panel discussion from the Elevate festival in Graz 2018 vimeo.com/273876820

And a later discussion with @matthew
m.youtube.com/watch?v=xJ2Tjc1A…

This entry was edited (2 weeks ago)
in reply to Delta Chat

quick heads up. Our impressions: #matrix is going strong with public sector entities, and it's where most dynamics happened at the conf.

We are rather focused on private and resilient messaging where servers don't play a big role; as we want #chatmail relays to be dirt cheap to operate, no pro version needed. Our focus is on informal usage, groups, family, friends, affinity or interest groups, whereas matrix is increasingly focusing on corporate/ organizational use cases. YMMV

So about the still-ongoing Framework community management incident,

> Harassment or threats: Any comments, posts, or replies that attack, demean, or intimidate an individual or group (e.g., homophobic slurs, anti-trans sentiment, calling other users “Nazis” or “fascists”, etc).

Who tf said it's completely okay to mix queer inclusiveness and nazi inclusiveness?

What killed Napoleon's army? Scientists find clues in DNA from fallen soldiers' teeth - NPR apple.news/ApEeiQs4hT72gnUggBz…