Thanks for letting me know.
Reader, writer, erstwhile IT guy, gardeners and firearms enthusiast. Acquiring and sharing the information and skills we need to navigate these trying times.
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Thanks for letting me know.
I may have missed something: what’s the issue with Blue Sky?
Further evidence that they don’t keep us safe, we keep us safe.
I have an upcoming article about this but: I just slapped together a older desktop machine with a large HDD and made it network accessible via my local network. Add Kiwix and a few other things and you’re most of the way there. The difficulty is getting people to use it.
Yes it is and it does my heart good to find it. Thank you all so very much.
Facebook came along at the right time in Internet history to grab all the Boomer crackpots and monied groups.
Facebook has always been first and foremost an advertising platform, and they went where the money is. Some of that’s the automated algorithms, some of that is deliberate corporate informationeering.
I offer some thoughts on the decline and fall of the internet here, and I think it’s germane to this discussion: https://michaelhjenkins.substack.com/p/visions-of-a-post-apocalyptic-internet?r=26iex9&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&triedRedirect=true
Oh wow, thank you for bringing this to my attention. I’m really glad to know folks are working in this direction!
I’d love to tell you that it was an attempt at visual irony, but the reality is I originally posted this in another corner of the Fediverse and was too lazy to remove the #hashtags. The good/bad news is that I have nothing to sell you.
That one’s gonna haunt us for a very long time, even though it really just made official what had been happening routinely.
I honestly think that’s what we can do: start to build free, parallel structures and attract folks to join us. We can’t outspend Google but we can opt out of their ecosystem to some degree or another both collectively and individually.
“Imaginary numbers”? Sounds like that DC fuzzy math . . .
And thank you for bringing that up as it helps me illustrate my central point: the importance of a free internet isn’t online life in and of itself, but rather what the open flow of information and communication enable us to do in order to make the world a better place. Thanks for allowing me to clarify.
It’s a real challenge in large portions of the world. So many national governments are perfectly happy with a corporatized, compartmentalized internet–and willing to pass legislation to keep it that way.
I absolutely agree, but I don’t think it’s too much to say that digital freedom and more important access to the internet and the various tools it offers played a starring roll in the Arab Spring.
Thank you for that insightful response. I appreciate you taking the time.
The motives and politics are absolutely petty. The results are an ongoing nightmare.
How would you suggest using the internet without search engines, and can that be accomplished in a way that is accessible to the average person?
Everything is going according to plan.
Wow. Thank you.