Wow, just wow.

If only the security team at the Louvre had read the Tuta blog.
➡️ tuta.com/blog/best-password-ma…

uspol

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in reply to Brandon Cross

uspol

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We just released our biggest (and most beautiful) update ever. The new version fully embraces Liquid Glass and comes with a ton of enhancements, fixes and meaningful changes.

The update is available now, and it’s so big that we couldn’t fit all the fixes and changes into the App Store’s text field. You can still find the full release notes on our website:

ulysses.app/release-notes/

Oh, and it’s really beautiful. Happy release day, everybody!

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If you, as an Android user, happen to have Airpods lurking around, a free Android app now lets your AirPods Pro play nice with Android phones by unlocking access to iOS-specific settings:
androidauthority.com/apple-air…

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Do you prefer a CLI over a GUI? With the hcloud CLI you can provision and manage not only Hetzner Cloud resources like servers, volumes, networks, firewalls, load balancers, but also our Storage Boxes, subaccounts and snapshots. It’s script-friendly (JSON output & stable exit codes), supports auto-completion, and ships as a Docker image for CI/CD.

github.com/hetznercloud/cli

Over the past year, I’ve really gotten into watching PDC Darts tournaments from the UK. The Grand Slam of Darts just wrapped up, and I had a blast watching all the matches this week. Thrilled to see Luke Littler take the title for the second year in a row—so impressive, especially at just 18. Looking forward to the Players Championship Finals next week and the World Championship next month!
#PDC #Darts #GrandSlamOfDarts
in reply to Hubert Figuière

@hub
Intuit falls in the “non-predatory” category?

Their whole business model relies on lobbying to prevent the US government from setting up a free alternative to their services

Like most countries in Europe have for instance

Their for-profit “tax advice” service is totally parasitic and could disappear in an instant if the IRS just sent everyone the filled out forms They Already Have, like every civilized country

I didn’t ditch Mailchimp last mailing because I was too lazy

Hello #FOSDEM crowd. If you know someone attending 2026 who creates some form of an #openart - under a free license, let them know that there could be a small community gathering for them. Theater producers, visual artists, actors, musicians, painters, photographers and more and more are welcomed.

codeberg.org/bogomil/FOSSArt

#Foss

I genuinely love software, when it works. I've just configured some stuff in order to scrobble music I listen to basically everywhere, Windows Browser, Windows Foobar, any app on Android, and Spotify to last.fm again.

Also will use some cli programs to transfer my Spotify playlists over to Tidal to then download that music in best quality flac. It's monday but I finally feel a bit competent and productive again.

Excited to announce #IzzyOnDroid will be at #FOSDEM! Our stand request got approved! fosdem.org/2026/news/2025-11-1…

We'll be sharing a stand with @shiftphones and @BlissLabs, showing just what a great experience our little corner of #Android can be.

Repairable devices, a FOSS #AOSP ROM and an "app store" (or repository if you prefer) for all the privacy and user respecting apps you could want to run on it :)

Of course the teamwork doesn't end there, we'll love to tell you more at the stand :)

This entry was edited (3 days ago)

IzzyOnDroid ✅ reshared this.

Guiding organizations in adopting, implementing, and transforming sustainable software practices across entire operations

greensoftware.foundation/artic…

#greensoftware #greensoftwarefoundation

The State of Django 2025, by @wsvincent.bsky.social (@jetbrains.com):

blog.jetbrains.com/pycharm/202…

#surveys #metrics #django

🇪🇨 El pueblo ecuatoriano rechaza modificar su Constitución e instalar bases de EEUU.

Se refrendan así la Constitución y defensa de la soberanía nacional que hizo Revolución Ciudadana con el Gobierno de Rafael Correa.

¡Enhorabuena! 🎉👏🏻

lavanguardia.com/internacional…

Тоталитуризм :blobcateyes:

Как нам тут одно время рекламировали туры по Северной Корее, так и мы теоретически могли бы показать, как "весело" живётся в условиях, когда пол-интернета перебанено. А это вполне себе новые впечатления!

Вдохновлено тредом @a1ba: suya.place/objects/664d04d7-4d…

#словотворчество

¿Ya has podido explorar la base de datos con algoritmos y sistemas de IA en la sanidad pública que acabamos de publicar?

Es la primera vez que esta información está disponible, y además en un único buscador en el que puedes filtrar por comunidad autónoma, especialidad o naturaleza de su creación (pública, privada, mixta o desconocida).

Échale un vistazo para conocer qué algoritmos hay en la sanidad de tu comunidad y en qué fase de implantación están:

🔗 civio.es/sanidad/2025/11/06/al…

Thanks to WINE, Proton, and Valve's hardware, a significant milestone has been achieved with 90% of Windows games running on Linux, making nine out of ten Windows games accessible on a new Linux installation. Users are flocking to other platforms during the transition from the Windows 10 to 11 eras. Thank you Microsoft once again for enabling the age of Linux gaming, you are our biggest marketing partner 😉

boilingsteam.com/windows-games…

So, @anildash wrote an interesting reflection on "AI" and Firefox a few days ago: anildash.com/2025/11/14/wantin…

He argues that the number of people who want Mozilla to just stop with the AI development and focus on a more traditional browser is small (probably true) and that people are so used to using AI in their everyday lives that it's Firefox's/Mozilla's job to make that as secure and "less big tech dependy" as possible.

I think that's not an unreasonable argument. I do think that the actual question is more about _what Mozilla is for_ and not "AI" (or other tech hypes).

From my reading the people who don't want AI in Firefox are often AI critical, sure. But it's also about resources and narrative. The idea of Mozilla was to have something that would work for the good of the open web, that would fight for users through participating in standards development but that would also argue based on what is right. Mozilla's sales pitch was a moral one - at least that is how many in the community on Mastodon for example interpreted it.

So when Mozilla cuts down on policy work, cuts work on technologies like Servo or Rust that were supposed to materially improve the security of browsers and people online while setting a lot of developer hours on fire in order to integrate fundamentally insecure (and some would say fundamentally anti-"open web") systems "just because people use them", it feels like an organization having lost their mission or the drive to push their values.

I think "AI" is just the latest (and probably biggest) event that illustrates a sentiment that has been brewing for a while: That Mozilla's mission or goals have shifted in a way that their original supporters no longer feel aligned with.

This entry was edited (4 days ago)

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in reply to tante

Here's another project to add to the list for anyone who cares about the Fediverse.

Almost a year ago, Mozilla shut down its Mastodon instance: techcrunch.com/2024/09/17/mozi…

Mozilla /could/ have chosen to redirect its AI resources towards Fediverse projects.

That could have come in the form of development support for Fedi projects.

Just imagine what a project like Friendica or GtS or Lemmy could accomplish with even one or two full-time paid staff funded by Mozilla.

Mozilla /could/ have built user friendly client apps for Fediverse platforms.

Mozilla /could/ have built Fediverse-integrated features (bookmark sharing?) or plugins for Firefox.

Mozilla /could/ have offered managed Fediverse server hosting.

It chose not to.

in reply to tante

Ah the silent majority. I must have missed this survey of what #firefox users actually want? AFAICT they seem dead set against it, can't remember a single 'I am a firefox user and love the new AI stuff' toot. The number of firefox users has dwindled massively over the past few years, almost negligible now. I used to use firefox because they were very user focused, that and the alternative was IE lol. 🦊

Mit einem Satz entfacht Kanzler Merz eine Debatte. Und erinnert Ibrahim Arslan an düstere Zeiten, die nie wirklich vorbei waren. Was er dagegen hält.
taz.de/!6126157

Highly Experimental Releases Of GrapheneOS Based On AOSP 16 QPR1 Available (UPDATE 11-18-2025)


Releases of GrapheneOS based on Android 16 QPR1 are available for public testing. These are highly experimental and aren't being pushed out via the Alpha channel yet. Join our testing chat room if you have a spare device you can use to help with testing.

grapheneos.org/contact#communi…

We've resolved all the major regressions reported during testing of our experimental 2025111700 release based on Android 16 QPR1. Our upcoming 2025111800 release will likely be our initial production release based on Android 16 QPR1. It should reach our Alpha and Beta channels.

We're aware a small company which wanted to partner with us but was unable to meet our security requirements has been attacking GrapheneOS with misinformation and libel since November 12. We'll write detailed a response to it once our port to Android 16 QPR1 is shipped to Stable.

They launched a device using a fork of LineageOS without standard privacy and security patches or protections. Their launch announcement goes out of the way to attack GrapheneOS with inaccurate claims. They doubled down on it on several forums where they got a negative response.

We have a serious OEM partnership with a large company actively working on implementing MTE and the rest of what we need. We need a proper secure device which can be refreshed yearly as a replacement for Pixels. We're not going to abandon properly protecting users to provide it.

Our focus is Android 16 QPR1, then Android 16 QPR1 security preview releases with all the current December 2025 / January 2026 / February 2026 / March 2026 patches and finally support for all four Pixel 10 models. We can find time to debunk another falsely marketed product too.

Companies marketing phones as being private while lacking basic privacy patches and protections clearly feel very threatened by GrapheneOS. Completely unprovoked attacks on us including linking harassment content is a bold launch strategy for a product asking people to trust it.

This entry was edited (3 days ago)

So if I'm reading this right: microsoft.com/en-us/security/b…

(If one forgives the sampling limitations (one question, 100 positive responses, etc.), which I'm not sure you should...)

The output of a language model is predictable enough that, even with simple ML models, if you

  • use an LLM to generate prompts about a topic x and not about a topic x
  • record the timestamps of when the LLM responded with the next chunk of tokens for each generated prompt
  • train the ML model to classify "known to be/not be about x" from the timestamps

then you can get effectively perfect precision of guessing when something is about x.

Or, if Microsoft's own research is true, then the output of LLMs is not in fact a divinely powerful information oracle, but so stereotyped you can predict the topic by the timing of responses. The oracle only appears divine because we cannot see any of the other requests, and are led to believe our question is unique and personal.

Or, this is a profound self own about the use of LLMs for information, period.