ccx

joined 2 years ago
[–] ccx@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 year ago

I feel like both of these are extremely location dependent. From my friends across North America I know that network connectivity can be very very poor if you aren't living close to a big city.

And as far your example with school goes, I've seen the polar opposite happen where all kids got a mandatory Teams or Google account (depending on school) fairly early into the lockdowns.

Maybe subcontinents are still too big to generalize about from one person's experience. :-)

[–] ccx@sopuli.xyz 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Enter https://yourinstance.example.com/c/somecommunity@otherinstance.example.com into your URL bar and it should come up after a bit and let you subscribe. Some instances have blacklists you can find under the "Instances" link down bottom, but usually this should do the trick.

[–] ccx@sopuli.xyz 1 points 1 year ago

If you submit a request under GDPR "right to be forgotten" they are mandated to comply. (As long you are EU citizen)

Not that GDPR violations are uncommon, but at least it seems the regulators are capable of slapping companies with hefty fines.

[–] ccx@sopuli.xyz 1 points 1 year ago

It does but most instances disable it by default and you would have to ask admin to whitelist you.

[–] ccx@sopuli.xyz 1 points 1 year ago

It does but most instances disable it by default and you would have to ask admin to whitelist you.

[–] ccx@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 year ago

While not backed by syncthing I'd recommend you look into https://www.etesync.com/ which provides end to end encrypted ical and vcard synchronization - that is standard formats for calendars, tasks, notes and contacts.

It has plenty of adapters so if backups/snapshots are what you want automating something like https://github.com/pimutils/vdirsyncer to pull all your calendars and commit them to, say, private git repo should be fairly easy task.

[–] ccx@sopuli.xyz 1 points 2 years ago

Lobbying will happen whether acknowledged or not.

[–] ccx@sopuli.xyz 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

XMPP actually has that right now, as you can restrict publish-subscribe nodes to contacts. Which is different from private groupchats in that you have unified timeline interface rather than separate chats in the few clients that support it right now.

Personally I strongly dislike this context-less mode of communication and very much prefer topical chatrooms and fora, but to each their own. I just wanted to note this exists and encourage people to try Movim and/or Libveria (both are web based) if that is something people are interested in.

[–] ccx@sopuli.xyz 1 points 2 years ago

Same, Android 10 LineageOS

[–] ccx@sopuli.xyz 1 points 2 years ago

This does sound like something that would work much better with Lemmy.

Partly it is my personal preference for structured threaded discussion as found on on classic blog comment systems and public fora ever since the Usenet.

But also: you get WebMentions so you know where links were posted, you get the entire discussion not just a fragment, and much more useful moderation both thanks to the vote system and thanks to being able to filter specific communities should you want to, in addition to the rather loose instance-based or very specific user-based filtering.

[–] ccx@sopuli.xyz 1 points 2 years ago (4 children)

So… is Android finally catching up to 13 year old Maemo in having unified contacts and messaging subsystem? (-:

It seems like a proprietary implementation that's trying to cash in on "exclusiveness" of iMessage and trying to hype it up in the process. Wouldn't trust it as far I can throw it.

[–] ccx@sopuli.xyz 1 points 2 years ago

As far as I know the XMPP-AP gateway is pretty much here already, so XMPP should move to the right and be connected with much of the networking platforms. Perhaps highlighting the specific client software (Libervia & Movim) that currently support pub/sub blogging on XMPP, as opposed to just direct and group chat the protocol started with.

I'm also missing RSS/Atom protocols being highlighted in the diagram. While they aren't bidirectional (or maybe because of it) they still create an immensely useful way to subscribe to content on the social web.

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