corvus

joined 2 years ago
[–] corvus@lemmy.ml 4 points 2 weeks ago

There are lots of scientific groups that work in the so called soft sciences that apply the usual methods of the hard sciences. It's not about soft or hard, it's about good or bad.

[–] corvus@lemmy.ml 19 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (3 children)

So it seems that letting LLMs to write sloppy posts for us can be useful after all. May be c/privacy should implement an automatic AI reformating XD

[–] corvus@lemmy.ml 20 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

I mean... yeah, you have to be pretty crazy to be happy living in this world as it is right now.

[–] corvus@lemmy.ml -3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

So you had to go to the meme version of the story to ease your pain about a non-specialist using AI to find a novel treatment that successfully made his dog's cancer recede?

[–] corvus@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 months ago

Yeah, using your 12 or 24 words you saved elsewhere safely. First create a new wallet having a new set of 12/24 words and select an address to receive coins. Then restore the original wallet with your saved words and transfer you coins to the selected new address. Now your coins are safe in the new address and the new set of words are the ones you have to keep safe.

[–] corvus@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

Interesting, I'll check it out. I see the flapak release, will you make it available from flathub?

[–] corvus@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (2 children)

There are a couple of things you can do:

  1. Hide the app from the app drawer. To open the app you have to go to settings and look for the complete app listing which include system apps. Search how to hide an app for your particular android version.
  2. Connect the phone to the computer and install the wallet as a system app using adb. Being a system appt you can disable it from the app's context menu and the app will not be visible. To open it you have to enable it from the settings.

In both cases is extremely improbable that someone that grabs it will start to look for hidden or disabled apps in an old and seemingly discarded phone. That's why nobody has to know that you save your keys in this way. Just grab an old phone, the older, cheaper and unatractive the better. Nature teaches us that disguise is the best way to hide. And in case is stolen, you have a good amount of time to move your coins to another wallet.

[–] corvus@lemmy.ml 6 points 2 months ago (4 children)

What you really need is an air gapped or cold storage and you can achieve this in many ways. I found that one of the best ways to do it is grabbing an old phone and following this guide. TLDR: install the software wallet and never connect the phone to the internet again and use QR codes to sign transactions using the camera. Practical, cheap, truly air gapped and doesn't attract attention like a hardware wallet.

[–] corvus@lemmy.ml 4 points 2 months ago

Posteo has an anonymized payment system, so you could pay with credit card and your payment information won't be linked to your account.

[–] corvus@lemmy.ml 22 points 2 months ago (13 children)

Incarceration protects you from thieves and murderers, and sacrificing some liberty makes you safer.

[–] corvus@lemmy.ml 9 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

It's a script that I made some years ago. Give it executable permission and you can search (e.g. streema-cli jazz) play and save radio stations. I uses mpv. It loads saved stations when run with no arguments.

[–] corvus@lemmy.ml 48 points 2 months ago (12 children)

I moved to Linux, use Freetube, LineageOS on the phone, listen all day to internet radios from the command line, browser with uBlock add on and it's been years since I saw or listened an ad.

 

I have a laptop with an Intel i5-1335 CPU and I'm about to receive a mini PC with a Ryzen 8845HS, which is going to be my main computer now. If I just install the SSD M.2 of the laptop on the mini PC, is there any software I need to install that was not installed when first installed Linux on the SSD while being in the laptop? Or something that I need to change in the configuration concerning the new architecture? is it OK to do that? In other words, can Linux deal with the change without any issue or misconfiguration? Just trying to see if I can avoid the work of installing Linux from zero and all the software that I already have on the laptop. I'm using Debian Trixie.

1
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by corvus@lemmy.ml to c/kde@lemmy.ml
 

Overall I find Plasma 6 a big leap in quality but there are some things that bother me, it could be my ineptitude to find the solution, bugs, definite changes or because of using wayland, so I'd appreciate any clue:

  1. I don't find the way to set autologin in system settings
  2. I don't know how to put Kate as a system tray icon, it's not on the list of entries
  3. If Kate or Okular are already open and I right click a document from Dolphin to open it, they do so but they stay in the background if they were there. The same happens if I open the file from the comand line, like kate doc.txt
  4. meta+arrow_key tile the window according to the arrow key used. Doing the same again return the window back to the original position in Plasma 5 (or X11). Very handy. Doesn't happen anymore.

Probably I'm forgetting something else but solving those would be great.

 

In Debian live images the links to download the testing branch are broken. Any alternative way to download them?

 

During the past few years I was avoiding the increasing number of products or services that required biometric verification, specially face recognition (FR). But the things are getting harder are harder in my country:

  • The largest e-commerce platform in latin america and the most used in my country requires FR to use it. It was possible to use cash if you buy from its website but since a couple of weeks it's requesting me to identify using it's app.
  • The telecoms demands FR from now on if you want a new SIM card in case you lost your phone or it's been stolen.
  • The bank is now pressing me to use their app with FR as a 2fa when using homebanking from its website, something that wasn't necessary up to some weeks ago.
  • The government is in the same direction as it's moving to digitalizing many burocratic procedures and also requires FR.

and the list is increasing quickly.

I've never used any private social networks and I've degoogled many years ago, the only non free software that I use is Whatsapp because in some countries in latin america is almost imposible not to use it, you need it even to call to the car towing service.

Anybody that is well informed knows the dangers of allowing such an amount of private information now tied to our face be available for hackers now equiped with AI, but frankly it seems a lost cause to fight against something that 99.9% of people dont worry about and give consent to do so to corporations (that sell all your data to whoever wants it) and governments (who use it as a tool of control).

I don't know, may be I'm also worring to much and it's not that serious, after all if tens of millions of people do the same the chances of being targeted by hackers is not different of being robbed in the street (at least in latin america) and with the obiquitous surveillance cameras plus the almost unavoidable need of a phone, the government probably know exactly where you are and how you look, so the information may be already available. Perhaps it's time to give up and adapt to the world we now live in.

 
 
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/2075327

Another good DW documentary showing us that the catastrophe is already upon us and it's just the begining.

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