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Linux continues hitting above 3% desktop user share on Statcounter | GamingOnLinux
https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2023/08/linux-continues-hitting-above-3-desktop-user-share/
https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2023/08/linux-continues-hitting-above-3-desktop-user-share/
GamingOnLinux
Linux continues hitting above 3% desktop user share on Statcounter
Another month down and we can see that the Linux desktop user share is continuing to rise and not just on the recent Steam Survey.
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Linux Mint 21.3 Arrives December + New Edge ISO Planned - OMG! Ubuntu
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2023/08/linux-mint-21-3-plans
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2023/08/linux-mint-21-3-plans
OMG! Ubuntu
Linux Mint 21.3 Arrives December + New Edge ISO Planned
With Linux Mint 21.2 release out, development attention turns toward its successor, Linux Mint 21.3, which Mint today confirmed will be released in
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Ubuntu 22.04 Users Can Now Upgrade to Linux Kernel 6.2 - OMG! Ubuntu
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2023/08/ubuntu-22-04-linux-kernel-6-2
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2023/08/ubuntu-22-04-linux-kernel-6-2
OMG! Ubuntu
Ubuntu 22.04 Users Can Now Upgrade to Linux Kernel 6.2
Ubuntu 22.04 LTS users can now upgrade to Linux kernel 6.2 using the Software Updater tool. Ahead of the formal Ubuntu 22.04.3 point release due next week
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https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2023/08/nvk-the-open-source-vulkan-driver-for-nvidia-merged-into-mesa/
GamingOnLinux
NVK the open source Vulkan driver for NVIDIA merged into Mesa
Well, it happened! The open source Vulkan driver for NVIDIA GPUs named NVK has been officially merged into Mesa.
2023-07-28
WEI ("Web Environment Integrity") is an all-out attack on the free Internet
Submitted by Greg Farough on July 28, 2023 - 7:34am
Using a free browser is now more important than ever. We've written recently on this topic, but the issue we wrote about there was minor compared to the gross injustice Google is now attempting to force down the throats of web users around the world. The so-called "Web Environment Integrity" (WEI) is the worst stunt we've seen from them in some time. Beginning its life as an innocuous, if worrying, policy document posted to Microsoft GitHub, Google has now fast-tracked its development into their Chromium browser. At its current rate of progress, WEI will be upon us in no time.
By giving developers an API through which they can approve certain browser configurations while forbidding others, WEI is a tremendous step toward the "enshittification" of the web as a whole. Many of us have grown up with a specific idea of the Internet, the notion of it as a collection of hyperlinked pages that can be accessed by a wide variety of different machines, programs, and operating systems. WEI is this idea's antithesis.
Compared to its staggering potential effects, the technical means through which WEI will accomplish its ends is relatively simple. Before serving a web page, a server can ask a third-party "verification" service to make sure that the user's browsing environment has not been "tampered" with. A translation of the policy's terminology will help us here: this Google-owned server will be asked to make sure that the browser does not deviate in any way from Google's accepted browser configuration, precluding any meaningful use of the four freedoms. It is not far-fetched to imagine a future in which sites simply refuse to serve pages to users running free browsers or free operating systems. If WEI isn't stopped now, that future will come sooner than we think.
While Web Environment Integrity has a policy document that attempts to explain valid ways in which it could be used, these are all non-issues compared to the way that we know it will be used. It will be used by governments to ensure that only their officially "approved" (read: backdoored) browsers are able to access the Internet; it will be used by corporations like Netflix to further Digital Restrictions Management (DRM); it will be used by Google to deny access to their services unless you are using a browser that gels with their profit margin.
Once upon a time, Google's official policy was "don't be evil." With the rapid progress they've made on Web Environment Integrity in such a short time, we can say very safely that their policy is now to pioneer evil. As we write this, talented and well-paid Google engineers and executives are working to dismantle what makes the web the web. Given that Google is one of the largest corporations on the planet, our only hope of saving the Internet as we know it is a clear and principled stance for freedom, a collective upholding of the communal principles on which the web was based.
Let us repeat: there is absolutely no legitimate justification for WEI. The use cases that the policy document highlights are nothing compared to its real use case, which is developing a method to obtain complete and total restriction of the free Internet.
We urge everyone involved in a decision-making capacity at Google to consider the principles on which the web was founded, and to carefully contemplate whether Web Environment Integrity aligns with those principles. We hope that they will realize WEI's fundamental incompatibility with the free Internet and cease work on the standard immediately.
And if they don't? Well, they ought to be ashamed.
https://www.defectivebydesign.org/blog/web_environment_integrity_is_an_all_out_attack_on_free_internet
WEI ("Web Environment Integrity") is an all-out attack on the free Internet
Submitted by Greg Farough on July 28, 2023 - 7:34am
Using a free browser is now more important than ever. We've written recently on this topic, but the issue we wrote about there was minor compared to the gross injustice Google is now attempting to force down the throats of web users around the world. The so-called "Web Environment Integrity" (WEI) is the worst stunt we've seen from them in some time. Beginning its life as an innocuous, if worrying, policy document posted to Microsoft GitHub, Google has now fast-tracked its development into their Chromium browser. At its current rate of progress, WEI will be upon us in no time.
By giving developers an API through which they can approve certain browser configurations while forbidding others, WEI is a tremendous step toward the "enshittification" of the web as a whole. Many of us have grown up with a specific idea of the Internet, the notion of it as a collection of hyperlinked pages that can be accessed by a wide variety of different machines, programs, and operating systems. WEI is this idea's antithesis.
Compared to its staggering potential effects, the technical means through which WEI will accomplish its ends is relatively simple. Before serving a web page, a server can ask a third-party "verification" service to make sure that the user's browsing environment has not been "tampered" with. A translation of the policy's terminology will help us here: this Google-owned server will be asked to make sure that the browser does not deviate in any way from Google's accepted browser configuration, precluding any meaningful use of the four freedoms. It is not far-fetched to imagine a future in which sites simply refuse to serve pages to users running free browsers or free operating systems. If WEI isn't stopped now, that future will come sooner than we think.
While Web Environment Integrity has a policy document that attempts to explain valid ways in which it could be used, these are all non-issues compared to the way that we know it will be used. It will be used by governments to ensure that only their officially "approved" (read: backdoored) browsers are able to access the Internet; it will be used by corporations like Netflix to further Digital Restrictions Management (DRM); it will be used by Google to deny access to their services unless you are using a browser that gels with their profit margin.
Once upon a time, Google's official policy was "don't be evil." With the rapid progress they've made on Web Environment Integrity in such a short time, we can say very safely that their policy is now to pioneer evil. As we write this, talented and well-paid Google engineers and executives are working to dismantle what makes the web the web. Given that Google is one of the largest corporations on the planet, our only hope of saving the Internet as we know it is a clear and principled stance for freedom, a collective upholding of the communal principles on which the web was based.
Let us repeat: there is absolutely no legitimate justification for WEI. The use cases that the policy document highlights are nothing compared to its real use case, which is developing a method to obtain complete and total restriction of the free Internet.
We urge everyone involved in a decision-making capacity at Google to consider the principles on which the web was founded, and to carefully contemplate whether Web Environment Integrity aligns with those principles. We hope that they will realize WEI's fundamental incompatibility with the free Internet and cease work on the standard immediately.
And if they don't? Well, they ought to be ashamed.
https://www.defectivebydesign.org/blog/web_environment_integrity_is_an_all_out_attack_on_free_internet
LINUX π¬π§ English
2023-07-28 WEI ("Web Environment Integrity") is an all-out attack on the free Internet Submitted by Greg Farough on July 28, 2023 - 7:34am Using a free browser is now more important than ever. We've written recently on this topic, but the issue we wroteβ¦
2023_07_28_WEI_''Web_Environment_Integrity''_is_an_all_out_attack.pdf
191.4 KB
2023-07-28
WEI ("Web Environment Integrity") is an all-out attack on the free Internet
Submitted by Greg Farough on July 28, 2023 - 7:34am
#PDF
https://www.defectivebydesign.org/blog/web_environment_integrity_is_an_all_out_attack_on_free_internet
WEI ("Web Environment Integrity") is an all-out attack on the free Internet
Submitted by Greg Farough on July 28, 2023 - 7:34am
https://www.defectivebydesign.org/blog/web_environment_integrity_is_an_all_out_attack_on_free_internet
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Firefox Tests Privacy-Friendly Web Page Translations - OMG! Ubuntu
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2023/08/firefox-117-private-translation
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2023/08/firefox-117-private-translation
OMG! Ubuntu
Firefox Tests Privacy-Friendly Web Page Translations
Web page translations are available in the latest beta builds of Mozilla Firefox. Google Chrome's built-in translation capabilities are something I find
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Pine64βs RISC-V Tablet Gets KDE-Powered Desktop Image
https://www.omglinux.com/pinetab-v-tablet-plasma-desktop-distro/
https://www.omglinux.com/pinetab-v-tablet-plasma-desktop-distro/
OMG! Linux
Pine64's RISC-V Tablet Gets KDE-Powered Desktop Image - OMG! Linux
When Pine64 launched its RISC-V tablet earlier this year they were clear from the start: software support, particularly usable desktop Linux distros,
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Phoronix
Intel Wiring Up DisplayPort Alt Mode 2.1 Support For Linux
Last year the DisplayPort 2.1 specification was published and now Intel's open-source Linux engineers are working on adding support to the kernel for handling of the DisplayPort Alternate Mode 2.1 support for that DP operation over USB Type-C connections.
#Telegram:
Just installed/upgraded to @Telegram Version 10.0.2 βΌοΈ
β
Available at:
https://telegram.org/apps
... or for #Android, directly at:
https://telegram.org/android
(about 68MB)
Just installed/upgraded to @Telegram Version 10.0.2 βΌοΈ
β
Available at:
https://telegram.org/apps
... or for #Android, directly at:
https://telegram.org/android
(about 68MB)