DRM is anti-user cancer. Denuvo is a good example why it's ethical to crack DRM and to never purchase anything that contains it.
sourcery
I don't care if Jonah banged your mother or stole your lunch money. Compare privacytools VPN recommendations to privacyguides and then tell me why I should take anything privacytools says seriously.
It would be a shame if people started backing up and archiving their favourite YouTube channels using yt-dlp.
I don't think it really matters in the long run. After that site goes public and they try and appeal to advertisers, that subreddit and NSFW in general will become unpalatable to advertisers for not being 'brand safe' regardless of legality of simple discussions. It might take a few years but migration is inevitable.
That's nice if you want to update I guess, but Koreader is such a better experience that I'd never bother using the stock reader anyway.
I jailbroke my old Kindle paperwhite a while ago and installed Koreader on it and just read Epub through that without having to convert anything. No internet, no amazon and you can get second hand Kindles for cheap.
I think Free Software philosophy is polarising because advocates understand proprietary software mistreats the user and there is too much risk or temptation by developers or their corporate interests for profit. If you follow that train of thought you should be able to see why it would be inappropriate to recommend proprietary software in FOSS spaces.
Looks very good, thanks for this.
I feel mentally unready to constantly hear about AI all day everyday.
I wouldn't give them a cent or negotiate at all either, and the public aren't going to give a shit about how they're being tracked.
I'm pretty sure properly buried gates with no void space just won't lock. That's a pretty interesting question though I think your guess is as good as mine.
None. I run Jellyfin locally. No license bullshit or fifty different services. Don't even need internet if it goes down and I can curate my own library.