daguito81

joined 1 year ago
[–] daguito81@waveform.social 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

If we're going about what's technically permitted, then RedHat is also permitted to change licence, close it down and stop any new versions from being open or free. All their development goes into the upstream so I don't even know what Oracle is trying to say here. Except "we want open access to RHEL, not just upstream sources like CentOS".

[–] daguito81@waveform.social 36 points 1 year ago (22 children)

This is hilarious considering one of the main reasons IBM is clamping down on RHEL is because they are literally taking RHEL, changed the stickers to "Oracle" and calls it a day to sell their own propietary shit. Of course they are against RedHat closing down RHEL, they need it to compile Oracle Linux.

I don't like what RedHat is doing (or IBM, however you want to see it) but cheering for Oracle on this particular issue is just wrong

[–] daguito81@waveform.social 8 points 1 year ago (1 children)

They're anything but cheap

[–] daguito81@waveform.social 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

What did I miss?

[–] daguito81@waveform.social 89 points 1 year ago

Yeah this Threads issue is getting into the tin foil delusional territory now. Just as you said. They literally say "well use your Instagram acccount" of you bother to read their disclaimers they literally tell you that they are literally using your Instagram account. It's "Threads by Instagram". When you first log in it ll import all your Instagram contacts and you cna "follow" them. And if they don't have it yet it'll say "you'll follow as soon as they join threads" there is no "Shadow Threads account, because they are using the Instagram account.".

You can definitely be against threads and Meta. I Personally am not super thrilled about it. But there is way more than enough to hate a out meta and threads without making stuff up.

[–] daguito81@waveform.social 5 points 1 year ago

Hello everyone!

[–] daguito81@waveform.social 8 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I gotta admit I was being pretty reactionary about this and didn't know about the Oracle Linux thing. That's just... Plain wrong. Can't say I wouldn't do thr same as red hat in their shoes

[–] daguito81@waveform.social 1 points 1 year ago

Also, if it's easy to do it makes sense to have a bunch of accounts as assets in a nascent platform. If lemmy does take off, you already have a bunch of bot accounts to sell advertising/propaganda. Whereas if you wait until later it might be harder or more expe sjve to generate those accounts.

[–] daguito81@waveform.social 1 points 1 year ago

So not a lawyer, but I worked as IT/IS in a GDPR heavy industry in Spain. The way it was explained to me, is that we need to have all processes to delete everything of the user. There is no "do all this work and firgure shit out" If they make a request to be forgotten, we have 30 days to erase them from every system we have save some really specific exceptions. There is not "hoops" because GDPR is extremely "biased" towards the users (i don't mean bias in a negative way). There is no reasonable way to delete all your comments in 10 plus years of posting. So you can fill out yoru form to delete your account. Then m,ake a GDPR request. and then have some random comments saved (URLs)) so you can check 1-2 months down the line. If you see the comments then you take next steps

[–] daguito81@waveform.social 0 points 1 year ago (2 children)

They log IPs. but your IP has nothing to do with you nationality. And GDPR does't dicriminate wether you're standing in the EU or US but if you're a EU Citizen. If you make a GDPR request, they can A) Ignore it and risk getting a pretty bad fine B) Say "fuck it im not going to risk it" and delete your data. I guess getting on a VPN in the EU might also help the case. I would do it that way because if in 30 days some of my comments are still there, I can report them and they take that shit seriously and the fine is pretty bad.

[–] daguito81@waveform.social 9 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Make a GDPR request to delete your data. Use a VPN to be in Europe, how are they going to know if you are or not a EU citizen? Are they going to risk the GDPR fines assuming you're not a EU Citizen currently traveling in the US?

[–] daguito81@waveform.social 14 points 1 year ago

Yes they do. This is why some FOSS goes to places like Apache, why there's a Python foundation, Spark has Databricks, Kafka Confluent and Trino Starburst.

The good thing about open source is that it allows everyone to contribute code to the base. The bad thing about open source is thay it allows everyone to contribute code to the base.

You need repo maintainers, developers that are constant contributor, code reviewers, people maintaining CI CD Pipelines, etc etc.

Yes it's less than having proprietary, but it's nowhere near "0".

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