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@senhara In theory you could (assuming you control the other end's implementation) but I do not get the impression that this thing was built by particularly security-conscious developers

Zo, @DenBoschPolitiek is echt een uitstekende nieuwsbron. Ik volg ze hier nu een paar weken, en ik heb al zoveel dingen geleerd en opgestoken over wat er hier in de gemeente allemaal gaande is.

Hoor je er niet bij als je niet wilt meedoen met de digitale wereld? En als je wel mee wilt doen, kan het dan toch zijn dat je er niet bijhoort?
#column
#digitaleinclusie

denboschpolitiek.nl/nieuws/?ti

@denbosch

PSA, powertools, physical injury 

So here's a PSA: if you intend to buy an angle grinder, DO NOT buy one that's continuous-operation. A safe cutting tool MUST have a switch that automatically turns the tool off as soon as you stop holding it, a so-called "dead man's switch".

Consider what happens if you accidentally drop your angle grinder, and it doesn't have automatic turn-off; the disc can hit the floor, which will launch it off in a random direction, which is potentially going to be your legs.

It can and will severely injure you if that happens, possibly fucking up your legs irrecoverably, for the rest of your life.

Do not buy continuous-operation cutting devices.

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@senhara (And I suspect that that password is getting string-interpolated into some kind of API call or shell command that goes into another system which needs to create a local account for every system-wide account, or something)

I wouldn’t mind a hard cut at Rotterdam Centraal/Dordrecht/Geldermalsen/Arnhem in train services during the carnaval period. This train is looking like a can deposit machine on wheels.

@Eric_ours_polaire @smveerman I wonder if NS still has a stash of "supposedly removed from service" trains somewhere that they use for football matches and carnaval, like they used to

Guess I'm getting the cheaper one with a physical tactile button (which *is* a dead man's switch) then...

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Yikes, Lidl sells an angle grinder without a dead man's switch

One of my dearest friends sent a handwritten letter and included HTTP request headers 🥺

We're slowly working on an NETV special report about digital reputation management in politics and law enforcement.

Do you have any examples of a police force or politician holding a strange press conference, making an arrest, giving a press release, or generally behaving oddly in a way that might have been designed to burry another story?

Borris Johnson made the news a few years ago for ranting about model busses. Many news outfits dutifully ran the Borris Johnson crazy model bus man story, effectively temporarily burring the story about his brexit busses, which had transformed from politically expedient to politically harmful.

But this kind of thing happens all the time! SEO hacks and reputation management are a huge industry, and its easy to make a big important thing disappear behind a small insignificant thing if you understand a bit about the algorithms and about human psychology.

But, by its very nature, this is a difficult phenomenon to track, so I'm looking for crowd sourced examples.

mozilla meta, subtoot 

"This is the wrong reason to get mad at Mozilla for"

Okay so like, what are you proposing? That people can only get angry with an increasingly shitty organization for the one exact reason you personally think is the important one?

That you would prefer "Mozilla can do whatever the fuck they want with no consequences" over "people getting mad at them for a suboptimal reason"? Because that's the practical outcome of that.

Like, what outcome are you hoping for here? How do you believe that criticizing people's specific reasons is going to contribute to positive change?

re: firefox, rant at fedi 

@deneb (The specific way in which all these things connect together isn't outlined in every post about it, but that doesn't mean that it doesn't still hold true, and also this isn't a court and some vagueness should be expected)

re: firefox, rant at fedi 

@deneb That article literally describes how they *are* in fact selling data, except they argue that it isn't "really" selling data (which it is).

As for the "watching porn" thing, that is entirely Mozilla's own fault; the Firefox ToS specifically says that the service AUP applies to its usage, and the AUP has that clause in it. It's badly written, and the interpretation of fedi creatures is actually correct here.

Also it's carnaval so there's zero chance of getting any kind of help from the library right now 🙃 The whole city is currently nonfunctional

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There are three different organizations (local library, national library, OCLC) involved in this registration flow and I have no idea which of them did the oopsie

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So I finally got around to getting a library card for the local library

... or so I thought, but it turns out that their entire online registration thing is just... broken? Most of the links point to the wrong URL and the one correct one redirects me to a "Forbidden" page with no further information

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