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Open Source Christmas Cheer GNU is Not Unix Iphone Music Apple

FSF Warns: Stay Away From iPhones, Amazon, Netflix, and Music Steaming Services (fsf.org) 199

For the last thirteen years the Free Software Foundation has published its Ethical Tech Giving Guide. But what's interesting is this year's guide also tags companies and products with negative recommendations to "stay away from." Stay away from: iPhones
It's not just Siri that's creepy: all Apple devices contain software that's hostile to users. Although they claim to be concerned about user privacy, they don't hesitate to put their users under surveillance.

Apple prevents you from installing third-party free software on your own phone, and they use this control to censor apps that compete with or subvert Apple's profits.

Apple has a history of exploiting their absolute control over their users to silence political activists and help governments spy on millions of users.


Stay away from: M1 MacBook and MacBook Pro
macOS is proprietary software that restricts its users' freedoms.

In November 2020, macOS was caught alerting Apple each time a user opens an app. Even though Apple is making changes to the service, it just goes to show how bad they try to be until there is an outcry.

Comes crawling with spyware that rats you out to advertisers.


Stay away from: Amazon
Amazon is one of the most notorious DRM offenders. They use this Orwellian control over their devices and services to spy on users and keep them trapped in their walled garden.

Be aware that Amazon isn't the peddler of ebook DRM. Disturbingly, it's enthusiastically supported by most of the big publishing houses.

Read more about the dangers of DRM through our Defective by Design campaign.


Stay away from: Spotify, Apple Music, and all other major streaming services
In addition to streaming music encumbered by DRM, people who want to use Spotify are required to install additional proprietary software. Even Spotify's client for GNU/Linux relies on proprietary software.

Apple Music is no better, and places heavy restrictions on the music streamed through the platform.


Stay away from: Netflix
Netflix is continuing its disturbing trend of making onerous DRM the norm for streaming media. That's why they were a target for last year's International Day Against DRM (IDAD).

They're also leveraging their place in the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) to advocate for tighter restrictions on users, and drove the effort to embed DRM into the fabric of the Web.


"In your gift giving this year, put freedom first," their guide begins.

And for a freedom-respecting last-minute gift idea, they suggest giving the gift of a FSF membership (which comes with a code and a printable page "so that you can present your gift as a physical object, if you like.") The membership is valid for one year, and includes the many benefits that come with an FSF associate membership, including a USB member card, email forwarding, access to our Jitsi Meet videoconferencing server and member forum, discounts in the FSF shop and on ThinkPenguin hardware, and more.

If you are in the United States, your gift would also be fully tax-deductible in the USA.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

FSF Warns: Stay Away From iPhones, Amazon, Netflix, and Music Steaming Services

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  • by aaarrrgggh ( 9205 ) on Saturday December 24, 2022 @04:46PM (#63155642)

    Not paying too close attention and thought it was EFF and not FSF. I get FSF's position and tend to agree from their perspective... but why no alternatives? Also, can't the M1 laptops run Linux?

    If the EFF was singling out Apple and Amazon and not a few other notorious offenders I would be much more disappointed. They should be advocating ad blockers though...

    • by Kitkoan ( 1719118 ) on Saturday December 24, 2022 @05:05PM (#63155664)
      Linux is kinda working on the M1 laptops, but not 100% yet (the GPU I think is still the bottle neck). And it's just 1 firmware update from breaking again. Not to mention, they have zero access to the "Secure Enclave Processor" at the boot process.

      It's one of those things that it can run it today, but might not tomorrow for so many reasons.
      • by saloomy ( 2817221 ) on Saturday December 24, 2022 @06:00PM (#63155772)
        The FSF gives us great open source tools, but nothing more. It does not develop new hardware, new software, or new services. So, I am sorry to say, the world of tech advances faster when private enterprise participates. There is a space for open source too, but that is not going to develop the modern technical marvels civilization at this stage requires. I wish it was. It just will not.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

          The FSF gives us great open source tools, but nothing more.

          Oh, just the basis of computing as we know it today? Is that all?

          • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

            Linux is fine and all, except the horrid GUI and lack of any REAL software. I make my living using the Adobe stuff and DAWs like Logic Pro. I'm perfectly fine running Apple hardware and software. I haven't have any freedoms taken away. Plus it doesn't spy on me like Android and Chrome. :)
            • ...except the horrid GUI...

              How many Linux Desktop Environments have you tried, and which ones were they? If you only tried Linux once, with whatever DE came with the distro by default, you have no grounds for claiming that Linux has a horrid GUI; just that you didn't like the only one you used.
            • by bn-7bc ( 909819 )
              Ok I'm gonna it pick here, while it is true that linux might lack some ( by no means all) desktop sw ( Davinci Resolve is not one of them and according to some peopke it beats Premiere Pro rather comprehensively*) , it has server sw in spades from web servers to SIP PABXs.
              *This might nit be the case if you are narrjed to some soesifiv plugins and/or exchange projects with other adobe users
            • It's literally right in the article... not to mention they're in bed with tencent. Just Google "safari sends all websites to tencent". Have fun in your delusional world!
        • Date: 2 Apr 1986 00:29 EST (Wed)
          From: RNS%MIT-PREP.ARPA%CCC.MIT.EDU@XX.LCS.MIT.EDU
          Subject: Sample April Fools message
          Organization: Free Hardware Foundation

          Now available from Project Knu is our new FREE Vax-11/780 compatible
          computer.

          The Free Hardware Foundation opposes the tyranny of hardware manufacturers
          not allowing everyone to have one of their machines for free.

          With volunteer labor, we have built a machine just like the VAX-11/780,
          even down to its nameplate.

    • Not paying too close attention and thought it was EFF and not FSF. I get FSF's position and tend to agree from their perspective... but why no alternatives? Also, can't the M1 laptops run Linux?

      If the EFF was singling out Apple and Amazon and not a few other notorious offenders I would be much more disappointed. They should be advocating ad blockers though...

      All this perl-clutching about Apple, and yet not word one about Microsoft?

      Riiight.

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Saturday December 24, 2022 @04:49PM (#63155646)

    "Stay away from: M1 MacBook and MacBook Pro"

    Apparently Mr. Torvalds is oblivious to the dangers of Apple hardware... doesn't Richard have his contact info? Why didn't he warn Linus?

    I want to like the FSF - I really do - but they insist on ranting like the old crazy "prophet" living in a cardboard box under the freeway.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 )

      "Stay away from: M1 MacBook and MacBook Pro"

      Apparently Mr. Torvalds is oblivious to the dangers of Apple hardware... doesn't Richard have his contact info? Why didn't he warn Linus?

      I want to like the FSF - I really do - but they insist on ranting like the old crazy "prophet" living in a cardboard box under the freeway.

      The QAnon of computing devices, the FSF

    • I don't think FSF is "ranting like the old crazy" guy; they are saying vote with your wallet and don't support restrictive vendors like Apple.

      It's hard to deny how controlling Apple is, generally to the detriment of competition and consumer choice although they try to sell it as protecting the consumer against the evil that lurks in the open market. The FSF is saying don't support that business model: spend your bucks elsewhere. I tend to agree.

      Hardly mad ranting.

      Confession: I currently own an iPad beca

      • And yet the FSF are the "crazy people living in a cardboard box." They produce nothing of value, just publish crap stuff like this to get donations.

        And of course, everyone knows that vi and it's variants won, emacs lost.

        But hey, how about that GNU HURD? After 32 years, why aren't hosting providers offering it alongside linux and bsd if it's so advanced?

        • wtf are you babbling about

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Stopped reading when the parent fails to be able to tell the difference between the FSF and GNU.

          If it were not for the FSF, you would be paying $10.00 an hour to use a 2400 baud modem to access an information service, have to beg the mods to approve any posts you send, and any software you would want to download would be DRMed so highly, you would think a late gen console was a bastion of freedom. In fact, you may not even have a computer, but be using a set-top box on your TV and hoping you bought the mod

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      I'm surprised that Linus went for a MacBook. I guess he is rich enough that he doesn't care and it being non upgradable, i.e. disposable. Interesting challenge to get Linux running on it, optimise for ARM a bit.

      There are so many better choices though. Has he ever explained it?

      • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
        The M1/M2 Macbooks are more or less the best for battery life/power. That isn't to say everyone should buy one, but if that is an important factor they're an obvious choice. We're seeing improvements outside of Apple, but it's not there yet.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Is the battery life good on Linux though? MacOS is aggressive with power management in a way that Linux might not be able to match.

          Personally I can live with just 20 hours of battery life from a Ryzen machine like a Z16.

          • by Xenx ( 2211586 )

            Is the battery life good on Linux though? MacOS is aggressive with power management in a way that Linux might not be able to match.

            Is that relevant for the average user? People that buy Macs are generally not buying them to put Linux on them. I get that we're also talking about Linus using the M2 with Asahi. I don't have specific numbers. I can only say that I see people online talking about how good the battery life is. For example, someone was claiming 1W idle with screen off and 3W with screen on low brightness. Another saying they don't really notice much difference in battery life with Asahi vs Macos.

            Personally I can live with just 20 hours of battery life from a Ryzen machine like a Z16.

            Which is all well and good, if

      • This isn't his first MacBook Air [cultofmac.com]. That article is from 10 years ago - but, in it, it sounds like "thin, light and quiet" are very high on his priority list.

        I am pretty sure I've heard he's also used some non-Apple laptops in the interim between back then and now.

      • by inflex ( 123318 )

        Macbooks are pretty cheap on the second hand market. Macbook Air A1466 2017 release with a 1.8~2.2GHz / 8GB combo can be picked up for $300~$400 and it's a good machine.

        Macbooks are value for money in many cases but perhaps not in the lens of "How many ops can we do per $ invested in the machine". Once you get over the ops/$ mindset you see the value in devices like Macbooks and iPhones. I've been developing for open source since the 90s and long been a *BSD/linux person as well as an electronics engin

        • Huh, "just works"? I have a personal ipa d that i had to get for work. First off, it can only install 5 apps before running out of space. Some Phantom storage problem (googled solutions are to factory reset or spend $20+ on some app), the OFFICIAL $70 "multimedia" hdmi adapter refuses to stream audio (i kid you not, i connected a bt speaker instead of my stereo system). All my $5-20 hdmi adapters for my android device all work smoothly, and the only problem I've ever had with running out of space for u
    • I want to like the FSF - I really do - but they insist on ranting like the old crazy "prophet" living in a cardboard box under the freeway.

      The FSF is what happens when a group is ruled by idealism. Their values become a sort of religion. They are well meaning in their pursuit of using technology ethically, but in doing so they have created these rigid rules that are completely detached from any normal system of ethics. In a way, they've become a sort of techno-cult. Everything is about being kosher and no one considers whether being kosher is pragmatic, desirable, or even ethical.

  • If you hate DRM Tidal is not the worst choice. At least they support third party (DJ) software,
    so you don't need to use Tidal's official client to access the music. Which limits the spying on
    you to the music you actually play (which is fair game, since your plays pay the artists) - also
    said DJ software lets you mix Tidal music with local files and you can record the result, if you
    really want to.

  • How about no. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by derplord ( 7203610 ) on Saturday December 24, 2022 @05:23PM (#63155704)

    I'd rather stay away from FSF. Fanatics, on all sides, are bad news.

    I use the tool that gets the job done and if that's Mac, that's fine. Windows? No problem. Linux? Works for me.

    • Missing the point. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Saturday December 24, 2022 @08:40PM (#63156022)

      I use the tool that gets the job done and if that's Mac, that's fine. Windows? No problem. Linux? Works for me.

      The point here is that you should promote freedom to a place above convenience. All of their recommendations are to avoid promoting DRM in exchange for a convenient tool when other tools to do the same job also exist.

      Effectively, the FSF is suggesting you go out of your way to ensure your money goes toward goods and services that do NOT seek to restrict your rights and your response was to make it clear that you take your rights for granted.

      • The point here is that you should...

        I guess that depends on who "you" is and on the reasons behind "should". I get that Richard Stallman and the good people at the FSF consider software freedom to be a moral issue of high importance, but not everyone does. Apparently, derplord does not.

        Maybe Stallman has a point though... software that I don't write myself has been pissing me off more and more lately. That said, making all software modifiable by the end user might not solve that problem these days, given how large many common codebases hav

        • The point here is that you should...

          I guess that depends on who "you" is and on the reasons behind "should".

          The non-moralistic reason is so that it's possible to inspect and/or modify the software if you wish.

          That said, making all software modifiable by the end user might not solve that problem these days,

          I disagree as just because a single person won't tackle the problem doesn't mean that nobody will.

          given how large many common codebases have become and the associated steep learning curve for an individual.

          Codebases only become oversized for either ill-maintained software incorporates functionalities that should be in separate projects/libraries (usually duplicative work) and software that does more than it should. Chrome is a good example of software that both incorporates functionalities that should be in separ

    • Using free and open source software is not about being a fanatic, but rather about being in control of your own technology and making informed decisions about how it is used. It's about having the freedom to modify and share software, and to use it in ways that align with your values and interests.

      I encourage you to take a closer look at the principles of free software and the work that the FSF is doing. We are not fanatics, but rather a group of individuals who are passionate about technology and its po
    • I once saw Stallmann talk and spoke to him and, frankly, sane is not the word I would use to describe him. Acted like a religious fanatic, dressed like religious fanatic, spoke like one. He ever wore a robe and had a disk platter on his head to himself look like Jesus. Total nutjob.

  • Here is what Tim Cook has to say [youtu.be] about Apple's relationship to the Chinese regime.

  • by djp2204 ( 713741 ) on Saturday December 24, 2022 @05:53PM (#63155756)

    The marketplace doesnâ(TM)t care about any of this- the market cares about library selection and convenience. Amazon Netflix and Spotify are what they are because of convenience and catalog. Until the free software community can compete then this is all just whining. PS apple products are popular because their stuff just works- no root, download and sideboard esoteric software to make them work.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Kodi is the biggest competitor to the streaming services. Just needs a really good built in BitTorrent client with calendar function. I know there are some but they aren't what you would call a great user experience.

    • The marketplace doesnâ(TM)t care about any of this- the market cares about library selection and convenience. Amazon Netflix and Spotify are what they are because of convenience and catalog. Until the free software community can compete then this is all just whining. PS apple products are popular because their stuff just works- no root, download and sideboard esoteric software to make them work.

      It doesn't just work ... it works and works and works and works. Iphone 7, more than 6 years old, currently downloading the latest update. The open source phones that claim they will give 6 years of updates are full of crap - they don't actually write the updates themselves, they just package whatever updates the community creates.

  • by Dictator For Life ( 8829 ) on Saturday December 24, 2022 @06:24PM (#63155806) Homepage

    For Steaming Services I use the local dry cleaner.

    I wonder what editor services exist in the world as a gift to Slashdot.

    • I was under the impression that Valve was providing Steaming services to PC gamers around the world.

      Which raises a question: Has the FSF figured out an adequate replacement for video games in popular genres? Is there a tournament-grade free software replacement for *Street Fighter* or *Super Smash Bros.* or other products familiar to members of the esports community?

  • When their entire thing is "STAY AWAY FROM BIG TECH!! ANYTHING BUT OSS & LINUX IS BAD" do they really have a purpose, or even a point anymore? Wake me up when they start providing solutions, not fear mongering partisan bullshit
    • "STAY AWAY FROM BIG TECH!! ANYTHING BUT OSS & LINUX IS BAD"

      HOW DARE YOU!?!! It's GNU/Linux!!! You need to support FSF so they can better educate ignoramuses such as yourself regarding the proper label for GNU/Linux.

  • I noticed this some time ago but just double checked to make sure. Your mileage may vary.

    I do a lot of movie reviews and out of Netflix, Crackle, Freevee, Peacock and Tubi...Tubi is the only one of them which lets you take a screen shot.

    All the others give you a black screen when you try to do one. (Using a Mac if that would have made any difference.)

  • So I actually know who they are and what they stand for (more or less). And if somebody were to "gift me" a membership they would get a quizzical stare, a very polite thanks, and the courtesy of me waiting until they're gone before binning it. Imagine what people with less context than me would think.

    I've filed them away with PETA. Reasonable ideas drowned out in an ocean of bad presentation.

    • From the FSF site:

      Your friend, colleague, or loved one will be able to redeem their membership from the moment your donation is complete. After donating, you'll receive a code and a printable page so that you can present your gift as a physical object, if you like. The membership is valid for one year, and includes the many benefits that come with an FSF associate membership, including a USB member card, email forwarding, access to our Jitsi Meet videoconferencing server and member forum, discounts in the FSF shop and on ThinkPenguin hardware, and more.

      So the only tangible benefit for most people is a mail forwarding service ...

      Of course, for $120 a year you can get your own domain, hosted on a vps, and your own email addresses, and your own web site, etc. But that's too much freedom I guess.

      • Of course, for $120 a year you can get your own domain, hosted on a vps, and your own email addresses, and your own web site, etc. But that's too much freedom I guess.

        Woah, there, let's not get hasty. Is that domain hosted on a server running free software? What license do you plan to use for the website? You plan wouldn't result in freedom of any morally significant sort if you were to implement it using non-free software.

        • Of course, for $120 a year you can get your own domain, hosted on a vps, and your own email addresses, and your own web site, etc. But that's too much freedom I guess.

          Woah, there, let's not get hasty. Is that domain hosted on a server running free software? What license do you plan to use for the website? You plan wouldn't result in freedom of any morally significant sort if you were to implement it using non-free software.

          What if it's hosted on a free software VPS running on a free software hypervisor BUT the hypervisor is also running other VPSes that run non-free software? You have no way of knowing! So all VPSes are unethical.

          • All you've succeeded in doing is "proving" that "Free Software" isn't really free in zealot's minds. Because you lack the freedom to say "screw you, I can do whatever I want with it." True freedom is found in stuff that's in the public domain. Everything else comes with restrictions. Especially the various flavours of the GPL.

            GPL == restrictions on what you can do.

            Public domain == do whatever you damn well please.

            Which is freer? Obviously not the GPL.

        • My site is hosted on a VPS running linux. As for the software that runs the site, I wrote it myself and I'm not sharing it. I'm exercising MY freedom, which includes the freedom not to be nagged by freebooters who want everything for nothing, including support. However, I've placed the results of my research into the public domain on that site, and public domain is FAR freer than any version of the GPL.

  • ....stay away from the internet? I mean, heck, you're on the 'net, you've already compromised yourself by using it to communicate. Why not go full tin-foil hat and recommend unplugging entirely?
  • by Voyager529 ( 1363959 ) <voyager529@yahoo. c o m> on Saturday December 24, 2022 @07:16PM (#63155876)

    The FSF doesn't seem to be able to address the real problem: the absence of alternatives.

    "Stay away from Apple" only goes so far, since they don't have a recommendation for a single laptop or phone, released in 2022, which meets their criteria for being "free enough".

    "Stay away from music streaming services" only goes so far, since the closest thing to a viable alternative is "keep buying CDs". This is fine to a certain extent, but less and less music is being pressed to CD. A few services still allow MP3 downloads (Amazon Music, incidently, being the most notable one), but they won't like the proprietary client required to do so.

    "Stay away from Netflix", and presumably Hulu, D+, and all the other streaming services that rely on DRM, which is 100% of them (possibly exempting CuriosityStream). Their solution......is what, exactly? Don't watch movies or TV shows? That's really the only viable solution; DVD and BD releases have a bunch of DRM as well.

    So...in practice, the FSF's advice is "don't have a smartphone or a current-gen laptop, don't listen to recent music, and don't watch movies or TV". And this, friends, is why the FSF gets ignored.

    What the FSF really needs to do is to do one of two things. First, completely stay in their lane, keep making the GCC and other Free Software that 99.9999% of society will never directly interact with, and ignore everything else. The second, and more preferable option as far as I'm concerned, is for the FSF to start funding solutions.

    The FSF doesn't like Apple phones, and they don't like Google-blessed Android phones...the solution is to get a Free Software Phone OS, and contract a hardware OEM to do a run of 50,000 phones that the FSF is then responsible to sell. Let the first 1,000 be sold as collector's items, maybe autographed by the FSF team, and let the rest start making inroads into the space.
    Similarly, make a deal with Lenovo or Dell or someone to make a Free Software Laptop, with all the FSF-blessed hardware for which FSF-blessed drivers can be produced, that ships with an FSF-blessed operating system (not Haiku), and guarantee that the OEM can sell 75,000 units, or the FSF will buy the difference.
    Then, let's get a Creative Commons streaming service together. Let artists and filmmakers conjure up a few interesting titles and let the FSF handle marketing and promotion of this service.

    Ultimately, the FSF is only going to go so far if their general advice lacks meaningful alternatives, which is the case presented. If they can say, "don't get an iPhone; we've partnered with Foxconn to make this $599 handset that is viable as a daily driver, runs Free Software out of the box, and has an unlocked bootloader so you can load whatever you want onto it", it at least shows a willingness to provide an actual alternative. In its absence, however, an eye roll is all they'll get from pretty much everyone who wasn't involved in writing it.

    • Companies have already offered linux out of the box for a couple of decades. Nobody wants it in sufficient numbers, returns are too high, and support is a nightmare for the average joe.
    • by parityshrimp ( 6342140 ) on Saturday December 24, 2022 @11:55PM (#63156250)

      First, completely stay in their lane, keep making the GCC and other Free Software that 99.9999% of society will never directly interact with

      Ok, granted, but when I wanted a simple-to-install C++ toolchain for windows recently, I discovered that the only free C/C++ runtime for win32 is mingw. You might think you could use clang/LLVM on windows, and you can! But you still need a C/C++ runtime, and that means either paying for visual studio or using mingw.

      So, yes, I may be in the minority, but FSF ended up doing me a solid. I wrote some C++ code to solve a problem at work, didn't want to jump through the hoops to purchase a Visual Studio license, and mingw came through. Totally recommend winlibs: https://winlibs.com/ [winlibs.com].

      There is something to be said for FSF's somewhat fanatical stance on software freedom helping to preserve the accessibility of general purpose computing in practice. I'd be sorely tempted to absolutely minimize my use of computers if I couldn't run my own code on them, you know?

      • What are you talking about exactly? The MS c/c++ runtime is a free download [microsoft.com] and Visual Studio's free Community Edition seems like a fairly complete toolchain at least for below the large enterprise level. Am I missing something here? You don't seem to be talking about 'free' as in open source because a paid VS license certainly doesn't include that either.
    • The problem is what you suggest requires the FSF do something besides whine and pontificate, and thats a big no no.

  • Google. Yep, the FSF sure cares about your rights.
    • Google.

      Yep, the FSF sure cares about your rights.

      I noticed that, too.

    • FTFA:

      There's currently no cell phone on the market that's fully compatible with user freedom, given the presence of nonfree software in iOS and Android. What makes matters worse is that all smartphones currently run a separate, nonfree OS commonly referred to as the "mobile baseband," which is responsible for most of the device's communications.

      I certainly get that FSF is a kook organization these days, but I'm pretty sure you're trying to find some nefarious thing that isn't there. The only mobile OS they have anything nice to say about is a non-Google build of Android, and everything else is explicitly crap.

      Try to remember, summary != article.

    • They hate Google too. Google just doesnt make many devices, and thus not relevent when warning against various devices.

  • I'd like to make a quick PSA that if you're looking for unencumbered sources of entertainment for your digital devices, the text editors vi and emacs have been providing decades of entertainment without DRM. If social media is more your thing, there are plenty of bulletin board services, and Slashdot itself, where you can start flamewars about vi vs. emacs.

  • This looks like a scatter shot against the wall to see what sticks. Unfortunately several of the points are counterintuitive.

    DRM is evil, it restricted what you do with devices and media you own. But you don't own a streaming service so I find it incredibly difficult to give a shit that streams are DRM encumbered.

    If they don't stop crying wolf they risk turning themselves into a laughing stock.

  • I bet peple hoping for an apple product will be thrilled when recieving an FSF membegship instead, I understand the FSFs need to fund itself, but what planet are they living on/what are they smoking and/or snorting, I bet a lot of people wanting apple products have never even heard of the FSF.
  • So nothing said about Microsoft, FaceBook, Meta, Disney+, TikTok, Twitter, any social media concerning about user privacy !! Then end up trying to sell their membership which comes with a code and a printable page "so that you can present your gift as a physical object, if you like. Big whoupadadoo !!!! lololol
  • Free world, so I'll choose what the heck I want.

    Do I get the notion that the world is rapidly on the road to being run by a handful of big tech companies and partially is already?
    Sure.
    Is there anything I can do about it?
    Nope.

    "Use free software!"
    Sure, I'll just go and tell everyone I know to do the same "What are you talking about?" "Are you crazy?" "Who the heck is FSF?"

    I love my macBooks, I love Spotify, NetFlix is ok.
    So, what, I'm going to cut of my nose to spite my face?

    Get real.

  • Please develop an ecosystem of open hardware then? I would love to abandon Google and Apple devices even if it meant losing a lot of functionality. I'm not so cool with being told what not to use without being given options. And I donate to FSF.

    For mobile I need:
    1) Text and calling
    2) Maps with decent directions
    3) A functional/modern web browser
    4) A great camera
    5) Great audio/DAC/DSP with Bluetooth 5.2+
    6) eSIM support
    7) Decent text input(touchscreen or physical keyboard)
    8) Great battery life

    Tha
  • Epic just got major fines for in-app purchases designed to be purchased by mistake and impossible to get refunded. And for abusive default privacy settings. No wonder they didnâ(TM)t like apples terms.
  • From the Slashdot headline:
    "Music Steaming Services"
    Music should be sautéed or broiled, never steamed.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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