

It happened before the attack


It happened before the attack


Call it hypocrisy or not, it would help the people in China. And now, a Chinese organization is calling for action. Ignoring an opportunity to do the right thing won’t make you look less hypocritical, but more.


The two-China issue has been out of sight. It has been replaced by One Country on Each Side or independence. In other words, Taiwan is not claiming to be China in place of the People’s Republic of China. Given the absence of that issue which could be politically rather than militarily resolved anyway, the reason for China can only be occupation or colonization, as seen in Hong Kong.
It’s not even open source. Being in Europe doesn’t automatically grant you the privacy, let alone the free software rights.


That patch is manually added. Moreover, some apps have hard binding with their id, making the situation more complicated. Kiwi is not on f-droid at all. They host their own version. It might be easier for the app authors to do it. But f-droid maintainers don’t have this capacity.


The thing is that changing the app id requires too much patching to thousands of apps, and the users will not be able to migrate from the current f-droid version.


Because treaty rights are parallel to human rights


Good to know that they have first-class Linux support.


Critics have also warned that the government could issue directives compelling companies to weaken or bypass encryption tools. The CCSPA does not prohibit such orders (McMillan, at para 3).
Unlike NIS2, which places significant emphasis on transparency, institutional accountability, and harmonized enforcement through national authorities, Bill C-8 consolidates authority within the federal Cabinet and delegates sweeping powers to the Minister without creating any independent regulatory body.


Maybe that’s the point - they provide all the hosted but privacy friendly services you need


The literal meaning of the law disclosed by the coverage only emphasizes the prohibition of blocking the access to a religious or community center. That’s what’s added. If they are still using the word “hatred”, it won’t include more groups unless they have this overt action.
Conversely, I concur that the police’s response to hate crimes has been severely inadequate.
Moreover, while the lawfulness of a protest will not be changed by the law if the protesters don’t block the access, the right to protest is disproportionally restricted by the existing legal system.


Although the exact wording hasn’t been released, the news coverage says
To avoid infringing Charter rights, the source said, there would be an exemption so people can advocate and protest as long as it’s lawful.
So unlike the Ontario one, it seems that protests are not prohibited?
For those who haven’t read the article, the suggested solution is for advertisers to obtain similar user IDs by using their own user list; it has nothing to do with gathering user data from the browser.
It is utilized in conjunction with other differential privacy technologies that gather user information and classify users.
In fairness, Mozilla needs a means of making money if anyone hopes Firefox or Librewolf to exist in the long run.
Apparently most voters didn’t vote for the sake of the person. Half of the voters don’t even know the name of the local candidate: https://narrativeresearch.ca/only-half-of-canadians-know-the-names-of-the-candidates-in-their-riding-and-voting-is-generally-based-on-loyalty-to-a-party-or-topical-policies-and-issues/