This meme comes from The Simpsons. I think the episode is called “MyPods and Broomsticks”, where they parody Apple. The scene specifically is one of the Itchy and Scratchy episodes within the episode. Scratchy is listening to his MyPod and dancing akin to the old commercials when the iPod existed, and Itchy cranks up the volume so Scratchy’s head explodes.
2023 Reddit Refugee
On Decentralization:
“We no longer have choice. We no longer have voice. And what is left when you have no choice and no voice? Exit.” - Andreas Antonopoulos
- 11 Posts
- 180 Comments
Tack on Tim Apple to the list, too.
CatZoomies@lemmy.worldto politics @lemmy.world•There's a lot we still don’t know about Jeffrey EpsteinEnglish15·8 days agoThere’s a lot we still don’t know about Jeffrey Epstein
Maybe we can ask his best friend?
CatZoomies@lemmy.worldto Games@sh.itjust.works•AI-generated reviews on Steam are becoming a problemEnglish8·8 days agoSee the excerpt from my comment you replied to:
If we can’t keep those spaces small and safe from corporate abuse, maybe that not-so-small minority will begin using the internet only as a utility and instead leave the socialisation and interaction entirely for the real world only. It’s far more personal and meaningful that way.
CatZoomies@lemmy.worldto Games@sh.itjust.works•AI-generated reviews on Steam are becoming a problemEnglish23·8 days agoI predict a not-so-small minority will get tired of bots, AI bullshit, SEO optimisation, AI-written articles peppered with Amazon affiliate links, predatory algorithms, etc. That minority will find smaller, human spaces to interact and socialise in. The majority, ever the fan of convenience, will continue to adapt to the corporate enclave of the internet.
The answer is decentralisation. The more fatigued we get with the traditional way we interact with the internet, the more common it will become to return to (or create) new decentralised spaces. Maybe those spaces won’t be as large as the Fediverse. Perhaps we’ll fragment further to niche forums, group chats, etc. If we can’t keep those spaces small and safe from corporate abuse, maybe that not-so-small minority will begin using the internet only as a utility and instead leave the socialisation and interaction entirely for the real world only. It’s far more personal and meaningful that way.
CatZoomies@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What was that thing you got really good at, and how good are you? English6·8 days agoNice! Do you feel like sharing your strategy that works for you?
CatZoomies@lemmy.worldto politics @lemmy.world•Democrats try a new tone: Less scripted, more cursing, Trumpier insultsEnglish101·9 days agoHell yes. The President we should have had in 2016.
CatZoomies@lemmy.worldto News@lemmy.world•Senate votes to kill entire public broadcasting budget in blow to NPR and PBSEnglish461·10 days agoKeep them just smart enough to work the machines, but too stupid to coordinate uprising.
~ George Carlin, paraphrased
CatZoomies@lemmy.worldto politics @lemmy.world•Why Is Trump Putting Makeup on His Very Normal Hand Bruise?English6·10 days agoReally? I heard that’s where he normally stores his McDonald’s Filet-o-Fish for easy access. Ever heard of a sandwich holster? Well he’s got one strapped to each calf like no one has ever seen before, on levels that no one has ever heard of before.
CatZoomies@lemmy.worldto News@lemmy.world•Starbucks takes aim at remote work, says some employees may need to relocate to headquartersEnglish46·12 days agohttps://www.cnn.com/2024/08/23/business/starbucks-ceo-brian-niccol-private-jet
Starbucks is providing a corporate jet and paying for him to fly to Seattle. He’s probably not doing it every day, but it’s quite disgusting.
But let’s force everyone who isn’t a CEO to uproot their lives and move. Starbucks pinky swears that after you relocate, they won’t do a round of job cuts in a year.
CatZoomies@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What's the most creative username you have seen?English24·13 days agoShe was an extremely active user here, despite being a busy Academy Award nominated actress. I assume she’s busy filming her next movie, or maybe in talks to do Barbie 2.
Such a shame because she was actively involved in the Fediverse. We need more Academy Award nominated character actors and actresses to join. Then this place would really take off.
@[email protected], not sure if you’re still filming out of the country but drop a line here if you can take a break from your busy schedule!
CatZoomies@lemmy.worldto politics @lemmy.world•Trump Cognitively Declines In Front Of The World During Meet With NATO LeaderEnglish24·13 days agoTrump: “And uh, what’s your name again?”
Mark: “It’s Mark.”
“… Shark?”
“No, Mr. Trump. Mark. Mark, with an M.”
“Got it, Shark. So listen, you’re my good friend, Shark NATO. And we’re gonna get these supplies, even if Crooked Joe couldn’t get this war done like he promised he would.”
CatZoomies@lemmy.worldto Games@lemmy.world•Vintage gaming advertising pictures: a galleryEnglish4·13 days agoMeanwhile, Nintendo in their rebellious youth:
Note: mario didn’t exist at the time, but i got this image from a news site that added it to censor the woman’s breasts.
CatZoomies@lemmy.worldto Games@lemmy.world•Vintage gaming advertising pictures: a galleryEnglish20·13 days agoNever heard of this ad since i was a kid at the time and not Dutch. Here it is.
Wow.
https://www.polygon.com/2017/4/5/15190396/sony-psp-ad-white-is-coming-pepsi-kendall-jenner
CatZoomies@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Whats ur favorite breakfast show or content to be had while waking up and enjoying a meal and stimulating substance?English4·14 days agoFun fact - the voice actor that played the young boy in Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego also voiced Lloyd Irving in Tales of Symphonia. He also voiced Robin in Teen Titans.
CatZoomies@lemmy.worldto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Browser extensions turn nearly 1 million browsers into website-scraping botsEnglish112·15 days agoStill sounds gross. While the developer might have opted in to selling your processing power to scrape websites, I doubt the users of each extension opted in.
Response from the developer:
" Users who want to support a free software product or creator can decide to opt-in to share their bandwidth. … Developers can decide to offer them additional features and content or simply use the money to keep the products free and available."
On User Consent:
“Our approach is always opt-out by default. I’ll write more below on how we are going about enforcing it now as part of a stricter approach to maintaining a transparent ecosystem. We provide default opt-in/out hosted pages to simplify asking consent and have left this page where users can see all the plugins to which they have opted-in and manage their settings with no developer as an intermediary: mellow.tel/user-control.”
In other words, users are opted-out by default. They can also go to that web site, and when they click the link, the page checks which extensions are installed in the browser and whether or not you opted in.
On Opt-In Enforcement:
Ars Technica article states there are “no checks to determine if a real user knows what they are approving or to determine if the developer just opts all users in on their behalf”.
“We do have a page where users can go and see if they are opted-in or have been opted in without their knowledge from the developer: mellow.tel/user-control. But you are right and we should do more. We have started enforcing the opt-in policy from today (by simply checking each integration and not sending requests to those that don’t show an opt-in) and will be doubling down on that in the coming days. Each new websocket request from an unknown integration will be quarantined and we won’t allow requests to go through until we have controlled the integration is compliant and is asking users to opt-in + is leaving an opt-out option clearly visible. We will also start enforcing routine checks on our Mellowtel integrations to create a transparent environment.”
In other words, the Mellow.tel developer has it set to always opt-out by default. However, developers of extensions may just opt-in the users without consent - which, I agree with you is gross. It’s possible those developers don’t explain the full implications. Now, the Mellow.tel developer is putting in remediations to ensure that the opt-in policy is enforced, and users will have more exposure to knowing whether or not this is happening. Meaning, they’re going to try to enforce default opt-out (as they stated this was always their policy), and make it easier for users to know they get opted in.
On Personally Identifiable Information and Monetisation:
The developers basically claims everything is anonymized. And the way they make money is, if you opt-in, you share “a fraction of your bandwidth” when browsing the web, fetching from a server, etc. They don’t collect or sell your user data because they aren’t advertising, and their business model is not advertising.
“all [Response data] is completely anonymous, it doesn’t point back to any user, and isn’t stored except the minimum time to at on it… Location - The only information used is country level (e.g., US, ES, DE), [and] it isn’t associated with any Personally-Identifiable-Information (PII) at all.”
So my conclusion - I care about my privacy. I don’t like being opted into things without my consent. According to this developer’s response, they never did. They’re trying to come up with a model to help the web stay free. Who knows if this will be viable or not. Developers of extensions can leverage this stuff, and in the past, some of those developers may have opted users in without their consent (or without full transparency or understanding of how this was happening). Even if a user was “opted in”, it doesn’t appear to be a significant impact to privacy as they have their source code published, processing happens locally on the user’s device, and the data that gets process is not transmitted, sold, or even have any identifiers. In fact, the data they claim is quite sparse to the extent that it’s limited to bandwidth allotment, country, and simple “keep alive” checks (heartbeat). Now I don’t have any association with this company, know this developer, nor do I have any stakes at all in this. This just caught my attention and I Had to read and learn more about it, and assess whether or not it affects my privacy threat model (it doesn’t for me, simply because none of the extensions I use have this thing).
For my background - I’m a software engineer for a SaaS provider. My company processes observability telemetry, and we assist customers to instrument agents in their environments (server, machines, clusters, DB, and end-user devices like browsers and mobile devices) to collect metrics to enable observability of their platform, and generate automatic application topology. Also a suite of tools to examine metrics and dynamic baselines, health rules for baseline deviations or other anomalies, analytics, user queries, complete business transaction view, incident remediation, etc. However, I have no background whatsoever in security. So I can’t comment on the security point because I don’t have a cyber security background. I’m only going off what the developer said, and it made sense to me. But I’d defer to a person with cyber security expertise to comment here.
Edit: Added some additional context, fixed some spelling.
CatZoomies@lemmy.worldto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Browser extensions turn nearly 1 million browsers into website-scraping botsEnglish3·15 days agoNice, thanks for discovering that. I wasn’t aware there was a rip off version of it.
CatZoomies@lemmy.worldto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Browser extensions turn nearly 1 million browsers into website-scraping botsEnglish431·14 days agoThese extensions use MellowTel-js. After this article from ArsTechnica went live, the developer responded in full detail and transparency.
If you’re a Dark Reader user (as that’s one of the most widely used extensions), definitely read MellowTel’s response on how their technology works. It made me realize the Ars article was not fully vetted.
https://www.mellowtel.com/blog/responding-to-ars-technica-and-mellow-drama-article
Edit: Dark Reader on this list is actually a knock off version just for Edge browser only - it’s not the widely used Dark Reader that’s on multiple browser engines. See another user’s comment that replied to me.
CatZoomies@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•BREAKING: X CEO Linda Yaccarino Steps Down One Day After Elon Musk’s Grok AI Bot Went Full HitlerEnglish45·18 days agoThoughts and prayers for the next CEO to not get Grok-blocked.
Thankfully, Linda Yaccarino’s Golden Parachute worked perfectly fine.
What’s wrong with me?!
I’m getting what I deserve I’m reaping what I sow—