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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)J
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  • I don't see crypto anywhere on the topics, I'm extremely anti crypto. My understanding is AI aspect is: what can we do about AI. E.g. AI here to stay, how is it going to effect the world. I'm not a fan of LLM's, hyperscaling, and slop. My background is in understanding biological intelligence (studying animal connectomics and reproducing biologically plausible behaviors). Which is technically under the umbrella of AI.

    You're welcome to be critical, I'm not an expert on the event, but it was sent to me by a friend who I know has good intentions. I certainly haven't see anything indicating antidemocratic ideas.

  • I haven't used Frigate specifically, but Reolink overall has been exactly what I wanted. Works out of the box no config, no signup, no login, completely local with the mobile reolink app. I never connected it to home assistant or anything, I either use a VPN into my home network or just stick to using it locally.

    I did have an occasional bug with the UI/connection. The iOS app gave me some trouble, but I use android and its been plug and play with all the main features I would want.

  • Also @MrMakabar, even if this post doesnt get (or arguably deserve) many upvotes, I do appreciate you posting this to the sublemmy so that we can comment on it.

  • The content of the video was outstandingly disappointing.

    I'm subscribed to this guy and don't watch him much because he's generally overly negative, somehow even when talking about things that deserve negative feedback.

    I'm glad it seems like we are all on the same page, to the point that I don't feel the need to list out any of the problems.

    I would love a critical look a solarpunk, especially the gap between the execution and theory, but I'm unable to find a single argument in this video thats worth discussing.

  • Yeah these numbers should be reported in % of profits

  • Yeah try it. It is concerningly easy. Write a program that edits the users bashrc/zshrc. Have it append a line that adds something to the front of the path, and have it shim sudo. You can even have it forward the password to the real sudo.

    Instead of waiting for the user to open another shell, you can also open a subshell. (E.g. your malicious program never returns/exits, it just appears to exit by opening a subshell with the modified path)

  • Immutable OS's like nix and fedora silverblue still have sudo, they can still rm -rf /. If they can do it and maintain security, then Android can too.

    I agree both the OTA and safe way of doing superuser requests could be heavy technical work. My bigger point is people who manage ROM's shouldn't demonize having full control of devices we own. Root can be done safely. Its not an inherent security risk, its just a technical problem waiting for a technical solution. "Just accept you dont need it" is not an acceptable response IMO.

  • Good guess about the federating problem. Thats a good reminder for me to change instances (was on lemm.ee before it died, .world was my backup).

    OTA, While a fair point, again is a technical problem. Desktop systems get timely OTA updates. Its perfectly possible for rooted Android to get security updates that are on-par with rooted (e.g. basically any) Linux systems. The hash can be done on the incoming update instead (integrity hash) instead of on the system.

    Linux has other tools and protections.

    1. If there are protections they're at the system level (not app space). Which means the ROM provider could/should add those same protections as Linux instead of saying "you dont need root, stop asking".
    2. AFAIK there are, unfortunately, basically no protections on Linux. Sudo can be trivially shimmed (add malicious exe to PATH) without even having sudo permissions, then the next time user inputs sudo an attacker would have their password. Its bad that its so easy, but its a double standard to say Linux is fine but an (up to date) Android with root is vulnerable.
  • What bothers me a bit more is, the OS could address a lot of what Graphene is talking about: there should be a builtin OS level "no overlays, no accessibility, allowed when superuser reqested, must use builtin OS controlled keyboard to input password". I'm not saying the graphene team needs to do more work; their contributions are incredible. But they shouldn't claim that having full control over a device you own is inherently a security flaw. Its a technical problem that can be resolved with ROM development.

  • If I can't rm -rf my root directory, then I'm not happy

  • security risk

    All those rooted concerns are true for desktop Linux / MacOS, and they still ship with sudo. If I can't rm -rf the root partition then its not really my device.

    The bootloader wall of shame is nice.

  • Yes, absolutely there is hope.

    Phones that don't support Google play services (AKA any hardcore privacy phone) will not be directly effected by Google restricting sideloading. The restriction is only for phones that use the Google suite. (source: https://9to5google.com/2025/08/25/android-apps-developer-verification/ "This requirement applies to 'certified Android devices' that have Play Protect and are preloaded with Google apps.") Graphene OS isn't going anywhere, AOSP is open source, even if Google tried to make that change in the OS, the community would hard-fork AOSP instantly and continue like nothing ever happened.

    Realistically this is going to squeeze people "in the middle" towards fully-google controlled Android (one exteme) and towards fully-de-googled Android (the other extreme). Its just elminating the middle. Which is bad for people trying to gradually de-google their life, but not as dire as it might seem.

    On the bright side, this is an opportunity for play-services spoofing to become commonplace and easy, and could cause more apps to avoid google play services. The EU also has a shot at forcing google to allow sideloading, since they've recently been forcing Apple to move in that direction.

    So, while not a bright future, its far from hopeless for privacy respecting Android phones.

  • Programming Languages @programming.dev

    (From ETH Zurich) Tree Borrows: Safety checking unsafe Rust, Tested on 30,000 Crates

    plf.inf.ethz.ch /research/pldi25-tree-borrows.html
  • Programming Languages @programming.dev

    Berry: An Embedded-Optimized Scripting Lang

    berry.readthedocs.io /en/latest/
  • I actually talked with her recently! She didn't know about Lemmy! So of course I told her last week.

    She also said there wasn't a group chat for sci-hub because of scammers trying to bring the project down from the inside. Which I thought was really sad. If someone creates a group chat and posts it on Lemmy though I feel like it would do really well.

    I had some questions about scraping the data and I felt bad having to ask her directly for every little problem I had.

  • Yeah I think scribbling out the 30% with a 100% and saying "roundabouts" would make for a pretty good punchline. I figured I'd get complaints about AI being quick and low cost compared to road construction, which is why I ended up going with the "bikes" punchline instead.

  • Additionally (I still love roundabouts) there can be a max-wait-time problem when there is heavy traffic in one direction.

    If a basketball game ends there can be 20,000 cars bumper-to-bumper trying to leave. Let's say (looking at a map) they're going left-to-right through an intersection.

    If there's 1 car trying to go top-to-bottom...

    • If the intersection is a stoplight it doesn't matter. Even if there were 20 million left-to-right cars; it's still a 5 or 10min wait for the top-to-bottom car.
    • If the intersection was a stop sign it also doesn't matter; it'll be the left-to-right cars turn then the top-to-bottom cars turn
    • At a roundabout though (at least in the US), vehicles entering on the left always take priority over vehicles entering from the bottom. So the top-to-bottom guy could be there all night

    Game days on my campus can cause a 2 hour wait on a 1 mile road. My campus is unusual, but just FYI absolutely insane wait times do happen regularly in some cities.

  • I mean I actually kinda agree with them. I don't like vacuum chambers and some of the stuff on here really does ignore the practicality of people's situations.

    I'm on here for the good arguments and laughs, not getting in so deep that I think everyone can and should sell their car tomorrow.

  • Sorry if it came across that way, I don't mean it pessimistically. The improvements the article talks about are great.

    I just imagine asking random people "Is a 30% reduction in traffic exciting?" And they say "Yes--BUT only if you do it with AI and high-tech stuff Otherwise I couldn't care less".

    Imagining that kind of response is hilarious to me.

  • Fuck Cars @lemmy.ml

    Amazing Cutting-Edge Revolutionary Technological Algorithmic Science Invention