Show newer

re: wayland 

@ch0ccyra1n I don't know enough about the internal politics within desktop environment projects to know what exactly drove these decisions; all I can see from my perspective is Wayland *just about* starting to be usable (with a bunch of major features still in staging/unstable), but some DEs have already been shipping it for a long time with predictable complaints following that (like missing screensharing).

Maybe the devs were impatient, maybe some manager in a company somewhere jumped the shark, maybe it was a consequence of Xorg support being unsustainable, maybe it was something else, I really have no idea about that part, unfortunately.

(My perspective is mainly that of a Wayland implementer with no direct involvement in other implementations)

wayland 

The problem with Wayland is really not the protocol itself, nor that it is extension-based (that is actually a very good thing!), nor some weird conspiracy theory about it 'competing' with Xorg or being some kind of 'takeover' (it's the same people developing it! It's effectively just the next version.)

The real, actual problem with Wayland is that some desktop environments started defaulting to its use before it and its ecosystem were at feature parity with the systems and tools people were already using. Some projects jumped the shark. That's it.

We can be critical of something like Wayland without losing all nuance and inventing conspiracies and doom that don't actually exist.

neverending cw meta 

💠 yes, the violence is pervasive and constant. i am well aware. i am looking for a staging area to address it in a controlled manner. constant exposure is not that

thoughts about legally shaky software licenses, somewhat hot take 

@owl Right. They don't want the WTFPL either, even though that is just about as unambiguous as it gets (and actual lawyers have confirmed that it's a valid license).

Pssst: influencers struggle with Mastodon because it's harder to influence people here. It's not because this place isn't neat.

thoughts about legally shaky software licenses, somewhat hot take 

@joepie91 "Your software will be legally risky to *any* kind of high-profile organization"

adding to that very specifically: this includes any distro other than AUR, nixpkgs, flathub, and snapcraft.

thoughts about legally shaky software licenses, somewhat hot take 

So there's an increasingly common argument in favour of licenses that prohibit using the software for evil, or other difficult-to-define restrictions - the argument goes that it's *good* that it's unclear from a legal perspective, because that scares off the people you don't want using your software.

While that is true, and I agree with the *spirit* of the idea, I think that that's overlooking the collateral damage of this approach, which has two main forms:

1. Your software will be legally risky to *any* kind of high-profile organization, *including* the ones doing good work, and so it will be unavailable to them too

2. More insidiously, it makes it very difficult to build on top of, limiting the benefit it has to the *desirable* users. I'll explain this one more below.

Building on top of someone else's software is usually a big decision that's mostly irreversible, you become entirely dependent on the upstream; you need a pretty large amount of trust in the upstream to make that kind of decision, as the future of your project (and all the work you've put into it) will hinge on it.

This is a problem especially in the context of disabled and otherwise margnalized folks who are trying to tackle difficult problems; they'll often have a very limited amount of energy, and will want to make it count.

That means that they are both a) dependent on building on top of other people's work, to reduce the energy that's needed to build a thing, and b) *particularly* badly affected if something goes wrong with the upstream, and therefore need an even higher level of trust.

Not only that, but those same marginalized folks are also some of the most vulnerable to legal pressure, including from eg. copyright trolls.

All this creates a situation where such 'shaky' licenses become a hazard; anything licensed like that may not be safe to build upon, and even if it is, their *own* project may get disregarded by others because it inherits the shakiness of the upstream's license - and they may well be targeting a whole different demographic that *does* care about this, even if the upstream doesn't.

The end result is that shakily-licensed software is not safe to build on, and so you end up severely limiting how many 'levels' of "building on top of other people's work" are possible with it - and that may sound appealing from the perspective of a 'dependencies bad' ideology, but it hampers the ability for marginalized communities to construct alternative systems and infrastructure more broadly.

This is why I don't like those kinds of licenses. Doing this on a license level all but guarantees that it is a threat only to the least privileged people, while the likely intended targets (governments, corporations) can mostly just ignore such restrictions anyway and get away with it.

If you *must* use such licenses, then please at least make sure you have an alternative solution to the question of "how are people going to be able to collaborate around this and build non-oppressive systems".

But really, there are probably better ways to scare off governments and corporations than a legal system that's stacked in their favour.

US pol: stop drinking that doom juice all of ya'll 

Though I might dance & celebrate when Biden wins, it will not be for him. It'll be in spite of what he & every mealy-mouthed norms-anxious compromiser has done to put us here. And then, when I'm done dancing, (it may take a moment) I will turn around and put my focus in a new place.

I'm filled with optimism because all caution is gone from my body. We can't afford an ounce of that.

Whenever I ponder the advancements of my field I get thoroughly dejected. Take the latest "great innovations":
- **Targeted ads** ended privacy in a way that makes Gestapo look like silly children
- **Crypto** gave rise to the scourge of ransomware
- **"Self-driving" cars** destroying our hopes for good public transportation
- **AI** turning the semantic web into a web of lies

If you're not an anarchist/communist by now, you're not really paying attention.

I should start a penalty piggy bank for everytime I don't follow my own #gamedev advise 😅 this time, I did not play through the new build version after uploading

You know, perhaps the idea of a centralized search engine for the whole web - *any* centralized search engine - was just a major design mistake of the early web, and we should all have been working on community-curated search engines instead.

POLL: What type of device are you using, RIGHT NOW, when you see this question?

(Please note I am not asking for opinions on the merits of devices, nor do I want to know the other devices you have. I want to know what device you're using to answer this question right now.)

Hey y'all! Quick reminder that you can still sign up to attend #SolsticeSchool talks until the event itself, here ✨ solsticeschool.scholar.social/

What talks are you most looking forward to attending?!

oh i get it. it's called "cgit" because its "cgi git" but also "a git frontend in c" that lets you "see git"

@jacksonchen666 I somehow managed to get a UPC barcode out of it with my scanner app

@benaryorg I generally dislike projects that list "tools we've used" as if it's some important property of the software, but this list is *particularly* weird and looks almost like resume padding - it seems to include all the small libraries that do one thing, which nobody would mistake for a 'framework'...

@hazelnot Can always just walk in and ask what it'd cost, and see what they say - I'm guessing they price based on the job

Show older
Pixietown

Small server part of the pixie.town infrastructure. Registration is closed.