- cross-posted to:
- linux@programming.dev
- linux@lemmy.world
- linux@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- linux@programming.dev
- linux@lemmy.world
- linux@lemmy.ml
Not to mention that they locked the unpopular pull request from reactions.
Not to mention that they locked the unpopular pull request from reactions.
Now I am wondering how many distros will use another init after this.
Looks like I’m putting on chimera after this.
Dinit*
You can just go raw arch on one of their inits then. iirc, I was trying s6 last time. Dunno how much OpenRC has improved.
GIWWWO sel4 instead.
Why is the new field to enter your age worse than the already existing fields to enter your full name and home address?
The road to fascism (and enshittification) is paved with people telling you to stop overreacting…
I’m sure you understand the issue isn’t the actual field but the premise behind why it’s being added.
I’m not even who you’re replying to but this is too interesting not to at least try to ask.
As this is probably going to be our first and last interaction I’ll preface this by saying we probably share a lot of the same values but it seems our approaches are different.
So here goes.
If you require me to read a set of rules to interact with you that’s an immediate red flag for me, regardless of how reasonable they are.
I’m not suggesting you stop requiring them, i’m just saying i’m also free to ignore them.
That being said i did actually read them on this occasion, i have no compulsion to abide by them, it just so happens that they mostly align with how i interact in general. That probably doesn’t seem like much of a distinction, but it is to me.
As a side note, I’m a stickler for word choice and a solid 90% of people i’ve ever interacted with who claim to dislike pedantic grammar police are actually salty because they are being called out logical incorrectness in their word choice or sentence structure.
This is purely anecdotal and i am in no way accusing you of this, but for me it’s an orange flag to see something like that.
That’s fair, i’d expect nothing less.
This is the interesting one, i don’t disagree on the principle but i’m interested to see how far through this you have thought.
As i said to the person i replied to, the issue here isn’t the field itself so much as the intention behind it.
If you’re far enough down the technological self reliance rabbit-hole to be compiling your own OS then you probably aren’t too fussed about dropping a few services if they mandate age verification, (the third party kind, not solvable by self compilation).
As a hypothetical. let’s assume somebody technically competent (but common sense deficient) has a visit from the good idea fairy and convinces someone in power to mandate age verification at the ISP level.
Is that a “stop using the internet” kind of moment or a “pirate ISP” kind of thing, perhaps a Cuba style local internet type deal or something else entirely ?
Does this way of thinking also address trust in the code itself or does that require you to read and understand all of the code being compiled, including libraries and other supply chain artifacts ?
Does it extend to hardware as well, with things like IME, PSP and perhaps DASH all the trust in the world won’t counter internal hardware based attacks ?
Not that i’m saying to do nothing, just wondering where you sit on this subject.
deleted by creator
Sorry I spaced out reading half you off topic nonsense. Could you rephrase your technical question again?
If you can’t understand it, chances are you can’t answer it so this saves us both some time.
I was half-hoping someone with a big “I subscribe to this specific and obscure political ideology” would be expecting questions/discussion.
Then again, that’s on me, i did see the big red flag warning at the beginning and went ahead anyway.
The flags are there for a reason i suppose, worth a try.
SystemD is implementing red flags? Is that what you’re asking?
…
I don’t see edit markers on either of your responses, so I must conclude you had no technical questions regarding this breach of commit.
If/when you do, let me know. In the meantime, I suggest you read up on esr’s essay on how to ask smart questions
Happy Hacking!
—𝓐𝓷𝓽𝓲𝓑𝓾𝓵𝓵𝔂 𝓢𝓮𝓷𝓽𝓪𝓲