- 97 Posts
- 806 Comments
I think it’s just one guy who has some paranoid tendencies. But it’s still significant if the French media are starting to characterize GrapheneOS as the operating system of terrorists and criminals, because we know from many years of experience now how governments attack and undermine the tools that give people digital privacy, and this kind of media coverage is one of the techniques they use to influence popular opinion.
Lol, I’ve corrected that now. An OCR Freudian slip.
The OS is still good and GrapheneOS remains the best option for relative privacy on a phone. The personality of the lead developer is unfortunate. I worry that it could have an impact on their reported upcoming partnership with an OEM, if this guy is impossible to work with. But I’m still using it on my phone because it does stand out as the best option for a fully functional phone OS with good security and privacy.
Just for convenience (since it’s hard to read the screenshot on a phone), here’s the text:
GrapheneOS is being heavily targeted by the French state because we provide highly secure devices and won’t include backdoors for law enforcement access. They’re conflating us with companies selling closed source products using portions of our code. Both French state media and corporate media are publishing many stories attacking the GrapheneOS project based on false and unsubstantiated claims from French law enforcement. They’ve made a clear threat to seize our servers and arrest our developers if we do not cooperate by adding backdoors. Due to this, we’re leaving France and leaving French service providers including OVH. We need substantial help from the community to push back against this across platforms. People malicious towards us are also using it as an opportunity to spread libel/harassment content targeting our team, raid our chat rooms and much more. /e/ and iodéOS are both based in France, and are both actively attacking GrapheneOS. /e/ receives substantial government funding. Both are extremely non-private and secure which is why France is targeting us while those get government funding. We need a lot more help than usual and we’re sending our the first ever notification to everyone on the server because this is a particularly bad situation. If people help us, it will enable us to focus more on development again including releasing experimental Pixel 10 releases very soon.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Bossware rises as employers keep closer tabs on remote staffEnglish
2·8 days agoIt pays badly and it can be disorganized, but no one I work with is that bad of a person, what we do is more useful to real people than a lot of tech companies and there’s no nasty politics to speak of. So yes, it has its upsides.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Bossware rises as employers keep closer tabs on remote staffEnglish
2·8 days agoI’ve become quite good at paying just enough attention that I can jump in if anything important comes up, and meanwhile continuing to work. I don’t turn my camera on.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Bossware rises as employers keep closer tabs on remote staffEnglish
10·8 days agoWe stick to that format with minor variations:
- Recap of the morning’s school run and dog walks
- Update on everyone’s pets’ health
- Update on peoples’ kids’ behaviour
- Update on team members’ health and their families
- Miscellaneous gripes
- All the sports: what happened, what people think will happen, and details of particular players
- Sports statistics in depth
- Mutual accusations of breaking things
- Defence against said accusations
- Gripes about boss’s emails
- Long, in-depth accounts from two team members of their last day’s work, minute by minute, with digressions into big-picture frustrations and grumbles about management, customers, etc.
- Recounting of the history of these issues over the last 15 years or so.
- Each person tells us that they’re working on the thing the kanban board says they’re working on, and that it will take them as long as it says on the board.
- Holiday plans or accounts of past holidays
- Goodbye
- One guy jumps in with a 15-minute anecdote about taking his dog to the vet
- Goodbye
- Any further anecdotes about things people’s dogs ate, etc.
- Goodbye.
Its supposed to take 10-15 minutes but it takes up to an hour, sometimes more. I usually tune in late and sometimes pretend I lost my internet connection halfway through.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft says Copilot will 'finish your code before you finish your coffee' adding fuel to the Windows 11 AI controversy that's still ragingEnglish
3·9 days agoWho hasn’t encountered that one jerk who builds only new code to impress management, and never maintains or fixes existing code? I think of them as proof-of-concept posers. They make things that look flashy, impress the execs, and barely work for a single use care, then dump all the bugs, maintenance and actual architecture on the other devs. LLMs are going to be a gift to these people and a pain for everyone who actually knows how to engineer things well. They’ll encourage this kind of shallow flashiness and make the maintenance problems worse, but the execs will be convinced that only the LLM posers are productive and everyone else is sitting idle.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft finally admits almost all major Windows 11 core features are brokenEnglish
89·10 days agoMaybe I’ve just been lucky, but for several years and on several different machines I’ve found Linux just works, while Windows is an endless treadmill of frustration and brokenness.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
World News@lemmy.ml•Pentagon Pete’s War Goons Accidentally Invade Mexico
11·10 days agoDo they have to take the Texans?
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.ml•Microsoft AI CEO Puzzled by People Being "Unimpressed" by AI
303·10 days agoYes but it’s surprisingly convincing given how it actually works. It’s more impressive than useful, and it’s a huge waste of energy.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft says Copilot will 'finish your code before you finish your coffee' adding fuel to the Windows 11 AI controversy that's still ragingEnglish
22·11 days agoI thought you made a good point. I have decades of experience and I find LLMs useful for the things you described.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Elon Musk’s Grok Goes Haywire, Boasts About Billionaire’s Pee-Drinking Skills and ‘Blowjob Prowess’English
54·11 days agoPee drinking is somewhat impressive, but can he eat shit and die?
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft says Copilot will 'finish your code before you finish your coffee' adding fuel to the Windows 11 AI controversy that's still ragingEnglish
66·11 days agoOoh, unemployment! How exciting! I love Microsoft now.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Devs gripe about having AI shoved down their throatsEnglish
10·11 days agoWhat even is the requirement? “Must be able to ask a chatbot to do stuff”?
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Devs gripe about having AI shoved down their throatsEnglish
156·11 days ago“We were still required to find some ways to use AI. The one corporate AI integration that was available to us was the Copilot plugin to Microsoft Teams. So everyone was required to use that at least once a week. The director of engineering checked our usage and nagged about it frequently in team meetings.”
The managerial idiocy is astounding.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Devs gripe about having AI shoved down their throatsEnglish
26·11 days agoAnd it won’t be the rich that get hurt when the AI bubble bursts. It will be us.





















I suspect they’ll invent VPN licenses and sell them to corporations but not private individuals. And they’ll pressure home ISPs to block suspected VPN traffic.