• arcine@jlai.lu
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    23 hours ago

    Next they will mandate a “race” field, and the same kind of imbecile will implement it.

  • evol@lemmy.today
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    I’m so confused he adds a JSON field and corporate linux (who fund 95% of Linux development) need some sort of age auth mechanism for enterprise deployments. What do you guys want instead?

    Like its not even enforceable, when the hardware attestation comes sure but before that why does anyone care (thats not going to stop you from changing a json field in systemd lmao)

  • ffhein@lemmy.world
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    Then he said Arch Linux should implement it anyway because the law requires it. archinstall PR #4290

    Well, it’s not “the law”, it’s your local law. To most people on the planet, it doesn’t apply any more than for example North Korea’s laws. As far as I can find, Arch Linux is not owned by a foundation or similar legal entity (i.e. which could have been located in California), but the lead developer appears to live in Germany.

  • NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip
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    You want the user to put their age somewhere?

    Have a simple script that asks for a number and echos it into a file called “age”. Done.

    And they can only run the script if they want to.

  • glitching@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    to all y’all with the “it’s just a text field”: what if the field is “race”? “sexual orientation”? “jerks_off_to”? what the fuck has a system managing daemon got to do with any of that? and why would you preemptively put it in there without even a pretense of a fight?

    fuck you make us! make linux illegal, in Cali of all places. guess how long that will last?

    • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Yeah, scary.

      What about some other scary fields like:

      • Real Name
      • Office Address
      • Office number
      • Office telephone number
      • Home telephone number
      • external e-mail address

      I mean if those fields were stored, could you imagine the danger that Linux users would be in?

      You don’t have to imagine, because those fields have been stored in UNIX/Linux since 1962. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gecos_field

        • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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          16 hours ago

          You should read the article and understand the difference between a comparison and Whataboutism.

      • kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        Those are also entirely optional and not having them filled in doesn’t cause other software to stop doing what the user wants.

      • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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        I think back then it was generally assumed this simply assisted with office communication.

        Imagine telling a UNIX engineer in the 70’s how almost everything you enter into a machine would eventually be used to manipulate or entrap you by the State and surveillance capitalism.

        • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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          Imagine telling a UNIX engineer in the 70’s how almost everything you enter into a machine would eventually be used to manipulate or entrap you by the State and surveillance capitalism.

          This isn’t a hypothetical. North Korea uses a version of Linux which does exactly that.

          It still doesn’t make these fields inherently dangerous, and that same argument applies to birthDate. Even if systemd build a verification system that required photo identification and a DNA sample it wouldn’t be a problem.

          The community would just fork the project before the totalitarianism update. The FOSS world already has a process to avoid massively unpopular changes. This change isn’t massively unpopular, this is a vocal minority who is stirred up by web articles leveraging clickbait and outrage to drive ad revenue.

          The age verification laws are unpopular, I’m personally completely against them. However, they do exist and adding an optional field in order to allow project, who choose to do so, to store that data is not a red line or the start of a slippery slope.

          In the future, if there was a red line that was crossed, we would fix it with a fork and not with a harassment campaign.

        • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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          Who cares why it is stored, these fields exist for every user in every Linux system and they have existed for decades.

          Either birthDate the field is dangerous or it isn’t. If it is, how?

          It is no different than data fields that ask for way more identifiable and personal information such as Real Name and Office number which have, again, existed for decades without issue.

          • PseudoSpock@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            16 hours ago

            Ah, but this time the government wants it to be able to be queried so that applications and web sites can decide what to do with you. That’s the difference.

            • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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              16 hours ago

              The government’s wants are not in the PR. The PR is an optional JSON field.

              The field isn’t dangerous, you’re conflating two different things.

              The age verification laws are the threat, not an optional text field or the developer who added it.

          • Shanmugha@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            I care. One thing is “you know, fields with this name have been around since before you were born”, another thing is “some idiots passed the law half the globe away, now we are preparing your system to comply. Someone has to ©”. The field is not the danger, the thinking, attitude and act is

            Edit: some local law, for fuck’s sake

            • Auli@lemmy.ca
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              2 days ago

              Half a world away where do you live since this is happening everywhere. To be half a world away from any place doing this would be hard.

            • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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              2 days ago

              That’s a fair argument.

              Is it fair to say: The field is benign but there is contention about if it should be added or not and users of the software are concerned that their voices were not heard on the issue. That can be handled in the normal project framework, perhaps by suggesting a publicly stated policy about these issues around legal compliance so the community can determine if they want to support the project or not.

              My argument is that I don’t think that the damage that was done justifies the hitpiece in the OP which is, almost literally, painting a target on the developer with the mugshot photograph and loaded language.

              So, if you’re not one of the people then we’re having different conversations. In that conversation, I do agree with what you just said. I’d like to see the very large projects, which affect a lot of users, such as systemd, have a more formal way to accept public comment and respond on contentious changes and feature requests.

                • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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                  16 hours ago

                  It paints him as an active danger, puts his picture on a wanted poster, includes his full name, workplace and the city and state where he lives and then writes up an article like an after action report of a cyberattack.

                  It then implies that he’s going to do it again and that he can’t be persuaded and so will be ‘harder to stop’.

                  Taylor believes what he’s doing is right, which makes him harder to stop than someone acting for money. Taylor already has the resume line and knows the codebase well enough to try again. That’s the true believer pattern. The argument is ideological, so persuasion is off the table.

                  So if he’s done a bad thing, he’s going to do it again, and you can’t persuade him.

                  If you can’t read the implied call to action then you’re being deliberately dense.

              • Shanmugha@lemmy.world
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                1 day ago

                To be fair, I am bit split on this. On one hand, name and shame is an effective strategy and should be used. On the other hand, “put age verification into Linux” is a hilarious stretch. And yes, it feels strange that I have yet to see any kind of response from other systemd maintainers and managers - after all, the man authored a pull-request, not merged into into upstream. I have not been looking for that kind of response myself though, which also serves your point: putting all the blame and anger on this one man (I purposefully omit name) is too much

              • kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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                2 days ago

                Is it fair to say: The field is benign

                It is benign if it is optional, remains 100% local and under the user’s control and doesn’t prevent other software from functioning as expected.

                • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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                  16 hours ago

                  It is optional, 100% local, under the user’s control and does not prevent other software from functioning as expected.

                  If it ever is not, then you can simply fork the project at or before that change.

      • jdnewmil@lemmy.ca
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        You must be off by a decade. Your reference mentions no OS and Unic was developed around 1970.

  • AeonFelis@lemmy.world
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    I still don’t understand why it needs to be implemented as part of systemd, and not - say - as a service. Or, if we want to “go with” the law - make it a kernel module, which sounds more impressive (“we are complying at the kernel level!”) but in practice so much easier to opt out of.

  • Routhinator@startrek.website
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    Is there an Arch fork that is not implementing this shit or do I have to go non systemd now? Because this BS is not going on any of my machines.

  • trackball_fetish@lemmy.wtf
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    Lots of disingenuous comments in this thread regarding the change being “just json” considering they’re already on a warpath of implementing id verification. They are testing the water to see what they can get away with. Furthermore, the Linux community has always been against shit like this (see: systemd outrage, open bios, gnu etc).

    • luciferofastora@feddit.org
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      I’ll believe that if and when they actually force me to upload identification to prove that my birthday really is 1970-01-01 and my name really is Nunya Bissnis. Otherwise, it’s really no different from Steam asking my birthday when opening store pages or porn sites asking “click here jf you’re 18” and take my word for it.

      So long as it’s being enforced just as well as the realName field, I maintain that it is indeed harmless. If the point is to have a hilariously ineffective solution as a fig leaf against a stupid law, I’ll prefer that to efforts to actually implement verification.

        • Auli@lemmy.ca
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          We are well past the thin wedge. The thin wedge was American companies purchasing every tech company or stealing their ideas.

        • ImitationLimitation@lemmy.ml
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          “Do not comply in advance.” There is simply no need for this. Resist because it’s our duty to do so in order to keep our freedoms. Start with, “why are they doing this?” Then go follow the money. Zuckerberg and Meta, that’s why. They have been under the gun for years to protect people, especially minors, from the harms of their attention based economy of apps. They hired lobbyists in multiple states to push this legislation. Why? Because if the OS does it, they don’t have to, and can blame all the problems on the OS. What’s the Meta business model? Gather data and sell it. The more accurate and targeted the data, the higher the price. What do these laws do? Add more data. Why doesn’t Apple, Google, and Microsoft resist? They already have the infrastructure and are data gathers themselves. Why does the government allow this (US and all 5 eyes)? They LOVE surveillance.

          https://tboteproject.com/

          • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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            Sincerely, thank you for spelling it out to the rest of the class.

            These things are always worded ‘agreeably’ enough that by the time we’re done going back and forth debating it all day, they’ve pushed even more invasive policies on us.

            • ImitationLimitation@lemmy.ml
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              27 minutes ago

              I try to explain to people a lot. If you like freedom, and you want to keep it, it’s a constant fight. The power structures are far more profitable without it, so they’ll undercut it every chance they get. “Give an inch they take a mile.” Don’t give them the inch.

      • CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world
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        I’ll believe that if and when they actually force me to upload identification to prove that my birthday really is 1970-01-01 and my name really is Nunya Bissnis

        It’ll be too late by that point. Way way way too late.

        • Auli@lemmy.ca
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          Then its already to late. We are well past the point of fighting for freedom and privacy on the net. Hell we let the net be bought up and controlled by 5 companies. And people happily use them and complain about big tech on reddit. Lime WTF.

        • luciferofastora@feddit.org
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          I doubt those changes would be PRed, merged, updated in my distro and somehow automatically pushed to my system in the blink of an eye. This isn’t Microslop we’re talking about who can force-push intransparent “fuck your settings” at the drop of a hat, and I’m certainly going to be much more wary of upcoming updates now. This isn’t my point of objection (yet - mandatory entry would be), but definitely a point of caution.

          If they stick to malicious “here, you can ask for a date, but we can’t guarantee which date, if any, you’ll get” compliance, that isn’t perfect, but it’ll be good enough to make a joke out of tracking the date at all.

          Besides, just this change being minor would be no reason not to keep pushing back against the law and airing our discontent about the direction they’re heading in, because the direction is definitely concerning.

          • CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            Your real name and location data have been stored in UNIX/Linux for over 60 years.

            IF you entered that info. And it wasn’t being used by applications to enable surveillance laws. It’s a false equivalency.

    • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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      Lots of disingenuous comments in this thread regarding the change being “just json” considering they’re already on a warpath of implementing id verification. They are testing the water to see what they can get away with.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slippery_slope

      Argue against what is happening, not fictitious and hypothetical scenarios that are not happening.

      Furthermore, the Linux community has always been against shit like this (see: systemd outrage, open bios, gnu etc).

      We’ve had fields for storing way more personal information (like real name, home telephone number, location, etc) since 1962. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gecos_field

      There is nothing that a birthdate will tell about a person that their real name and location will not.

      The criticism here needs to be aimed at the laws and politicians. This article is whipping up a lynch mob against a volunteer developer using a clickbait article for the purposes of ad revenue.

  • orca@orcas.enjoying.yachts
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    “It’s just a harmless field; what’s the big deal?”

    The big deal is that it’s on the heels of age verification bullshit that fascists are pushing through with the help of tech bros, so that they can eventually push all of us into a scenario where we have zero privacy.

    It’s not the adding of the field itself or the fact that it can be filled with nonsense. It’s the reasoning backing it.

    “But it’s the law!”

    Yeah, fucking and…? It’s a stupid mass surveillance law disguised as a protection, and per usual, it’s written like vague dog shit. This is the smallest part of the wedge. More will come of this and if developers like this keep volunteering themselves to help the fascists, we will all be fucked. Here’s an alternative approach: just don’t add this. You can fight back by not fucking implementing this. Easy.

      • PseudoSpock@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 days ago

        THIS! Those that do obey in advance, especially trying to help impose it on the rest of us, are collaborators!!! Treat them as such!

    • manuallybreathing@lemmy.ml
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      3 days ago

      “But it’s the law!”

      I was just following orders!

      this same person would be chuckling to themself about how pointless this all is as he locks the door on the gas chambers.

      • FoundFootFootage78@lemmy.ml
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        24 hours ago

        He’s adding age verification for the internet, not sending people to gas chambers. You really need to touch grass, urgently, because clearly your dependence on the internet is not healthy.

        • boboblaw [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
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          22 hours ago

          manuallybreathing is making an analogy, not saying they’re the same thing.

          You really need to read a book and stop projecting on the internet, it can’t be healthy.

    • njordomir@lemmy.world
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      Agreed. To elaborate:

      Sure, the developer is a bit of a Judas for complying in advance, but our anger should be aimed at the people with power and reach promoting these laws in the political sphere (the metaphorical Pharisees).

      To those saying “it’s just a field”, please consider that the timing is a more significant statement than the addition of the field itself. Why now? If you don’t support fascism, don’t build the frameworks that support it and don’t let fascists use YOUR platforms or software to make THEIR point, make them fork it and let them fail. I don’t think many members of the senate or house would be capable of adding this themselves. I’d be surprised if they could code hello world in TI-83 BASIC. If they ask you to do it, stub your toe and call in sick. Make it really shitty. Leave in a bunch of bugs that crash the program then blame the age attestation feature to turn users against it. Use copywrited code that they’ll have to remove later due to license incompatibilities. Report your boss to HR for every indiscretion that you might have normally overlooked. Or do nothing; that’s still better than complying in advance.

      We have to break the narrative that this is inevitable. There’s enough of us, with concentrated enough knowledge and influence (aka, you folks are a bunch if nerds and I love it!), that if we collectively stop, the whole train stops or derails.

    • chunes@lemmy.world
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      wasting 32 or 64 bits for absolutely no reason is also pretty offensive in itself

      • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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        wasting 32 or 64 bits for absolutely no reason is also pretty offensive in itself

        Storing 64 bits, in this hard drive economy? smh

    • Bloefz@lemmy.world
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      Also, they will use it as a means to lock content they don’t want. Like in some jurisdictions it’s already forbidden to share any kind of LGBTQ information even medical with minors… Even in EU, like Hungary. Clearly this age verification will be used for this too. And people not willing to age verify will be locked out too.

      It’s part of their campaign of forcing conservative ‘values’ onto everyone.

    • FortifiedAttack [any]@hexbear.net
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      More will come of this and if developers like this keep volunteering themselves to help the fascists, we will all be fucked. Here’s an alternative approach: just don’t add this. You can fight back by not fucking implementing this. Easy.

      Only thing you get out of this compared to the alternative of malicious compliance is opening yourself up to attack. You can still fight this without painting a big target on your back.

      • communism@lemmy.ml
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        Is there any evidence that they would go after random FOSS projects that aren’t hosted or developed in the relevant jurisdictions? Don’t comply in advance.

    • Majestic@lemmy.ml
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      You don’t understand.

      The alternative to device based private attestation which is what this is or could be part of is constant online verification by Palantir.

      Is every time you want to view porn or adult content you have to verify your real identity so evil corporations and the government who pays them know exactly what your fetishes are and can blackmail you. So they know exactly what you’re posting online because you have to face-scan and ID-scan to set up an email account, a social media account, any account with anything that allows posting content online. Is training the population not to enter a date for their kids or themselves when setting up a computer or device account for the first time, once but upon demand scan their face, scan their ID, comply, sit meekly in fear because everything they do online is known.

      What does this know? Your birthday. That’s nothing. As it stands it you can enter anything you want. Fight them when they come to add a verification system to this and point out parents would be in a position to set this up for their kids anyways and its just spying. Fight on stronger ground.

      We’ve already lost the maximalist position. The internet scanning and ID verification has already been enacted in several states and countries and we risk a world where it becomes the norm and hosting companies drop anyone who doesn’t implement it because they’re made liable as well. This stuff won’t be repealed. People don’t live in democracies. They live in a dictatorship of the wealthy and the corporations. Your dissent doesn’t matter and it cannot reach most tech illiterate people who have far more pressing concerns than to riot over this.

      This is a compromise solution and I wish more people would see it. If you can bend you don’t break. If you don’t bend and your enemy is the government they are stronger than you and they will snap you like a twig.

      Linux desktop market share is too small to matter. And if you make this push fail then the only alternative, the only viable solution these politicians who are being cajoled and urged to implement this will see is online live-scan face and ID verification and it’ll sweep everything. You’ll have destroyed the internet and having saved Linux won’t matter. After that it’ll be a quick move to ban encryption that the government cannot break and ISPs will block traffic they can’t inspect. Game over. A simple maneuver from the place you force them to by refusing to cooperate and enact this compromise, privacy-preserving solution. We need strong defensible positions to protect privacy and the internet and free software and to understand that the old ways have been lost, they’ve died, they’ve been strangled and a compromise position must be taken up to endure and avoid a total loss.

      • ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        They can already put it on the parents to verify if they want. Just buy age compliant devices. Stop shilling this nonsense and forcing fear and hopelessness down everyone’s throat. This is bullshit and you know it. We already have a defensible position.

        • G_M0N3Y_2503@lemmy.zip
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          It is defensible in this kind of community, but I doubt it’s defensible in a board voter base. For instance people see billionaires and are saying the government should step in and do something, because as individuals we are somewhat helpless. In this instance we’re like we can fork/we can revert so the government ideally just needs to back off. But if you ask a non-tech savvy voter (and a parent in your example) they will just see big tech and say the government should step in and do something. Has this method of governance been compromised? Sure, is this law an example of that? Sure. But what can we do? The government… Well until people can agree on that, I think we are just trying to find a compromise so that most people can easily dismiss the perspective that parenting tech is too hard. And if people can believe that typing in an age for their child and see big penalties for big tech if they ignore that age, that seems to me the placebo this situation needs.

          • ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            Am I the only one that is sick and tired of explaining to clueless people why this type of legislation should be shot down. This has been going on since SOPA and PIPA in the US around 2010 or whatever. I feel like I’m blue in the face.

            Parents can get child compliant devices if they want. They need to leave our shit alone. How hard would it be to fork a child resistant Ubuntu or have Mac and Windows do it so these Karen’s can protect their own damn kids. But forget the guns and pedophiles running every country in the world. Let’s just fuck with the passions of the FOSS community and open the door for more surveillance.

      • FoundFootFootage78@lemmy.ml
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        24 hours ago

        Finally a sane take.

        To take things further this whole outrage reads as a Karen screaming at a starbucks cashier and threatening to boycott the store because they asked for her name. It’s an overreaction to a minor issue, by someone who overestimate their power, directed at someone who has no real power, while the Palantir surveillance system runs on the cameras behind them.

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          Nope, I am a muppet whose livelihood depends on them respecting the law. If you are from one of the godforsaken regions doing stupid laws you should vote against them, I need to comply with your laws because I need to work to feed my family.

          You can call me a spineless muppet all you want but I am not the cause stupid laws exists, take it on the californianas for that crap, they elected the idiots doing this. I vote our own idiots and until now they made it clear this bullshit is not on their table, thank you wery much but I did my part.

      • mcv@lemmy.zip
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        Only in California and Brazil. And I suspect neither has a shortage of people able to add this field.

        • underscores@lemmy.zip
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          2 days ago

          Exactly, make your own fascist distro with a fork of systemd and leave the original landscape alone

  • gasull@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    He didn’t just try. He succeeded in doing so. His pull request was merged into systemd and will land into your distro eventually (if it is systemd-based).

    There are distros free of systemd, like Devuan, based on Debian.

    • a Kendrick fan@lemmy.ml
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      2 days ago

      There are distros free of systemd, like Devuan, based on Debian.

      AntiX, Artix, Guix System and a few others

      Gentoo has 5 different init systems

    • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      systemd already stores your realName and location. It has stored that information since the beginning.

      There is nothing that birthDate will tell a person that they can’t find out using your realName and location.

  • petsoi@discuss.tchncs.de
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    2 days ago

    I have the strong feeling, that some guys have crossed some red lines. Verbal abuse is also a form of violence. What will happen next? Will you beat, kill?