Many projects accept donations, for example for server costs or travel expenses (conferences, meetings). You can setup recurring monthly transfers to projects whose software you use most often.
Examples are the Free Software Foundation for various GNU tools or the KDE project.
If you tell LinkedIn they do something illegal, they'll just ignore you. If you ask a court to tell them, they'll at least have to make a calculation what is cheaper: complying with a court order (less profit from using your data) or ignoring it (more legal fees).
We will soon know.
Backups serve different purposes and if encryption by malware is a threat, you have to do backups differently, as opposed to, for example, hardware failure, where your NAS is a valid approach.
To protect against encryption malware, you must make your backups inaccessible. One example are read-only backup media like DVD-ROMs. Another example is to make regular backups on tapes or HDDs and lock them up somewhere. You only take them out after you have wiped all computers that were affected by malware.
#Peertube got already mentioned, but just serving video files may already suffice. Modern webbrowsers are capable of playing videos. Some tweaking of parameters may be necessary when encoding them.
Also, no frills such as dynamic adoption of bitrate/quality or high-level stuff like commenting, likes, or subtitles.
Most comments comments mention Brother, but for me, Oki is working like a charm. Using a B431dn (b/w, duplex) and a C531dn (color, duplex) with PPD files from OpenPrinting.
Older models though, not sure if Oki dropped quality in favour of DRM since.
Rules of thumb:
Laser instead of ink unless you specifically know that you need/want ink.
Stay away from HP, Canon, and probably Epson. HP, like IBM, has long lost its aspiration for quality.
Stay away from anything that is ‘smart’ or ‘cloud’.
The U.S. military's traditional approach to this problem would be a large-scale aerial bombardment before deploying any ground troops. Something that is not available to the Ukrainian forces, even if they were given some F-16s.
Many projects accept donations, for example for server costs or travel expenses (conferences, meetings). You can setup recurring monthly transfers to projects whose software you use most often. Examples are the Free Software Foundation for various GNU tools or the KDE project.