It’s fine, as long as you enable 2FA for Google and make sure to maintain access to the account you’re secure. It won’t have all the fancy features that some of the other apps have, but if it works for you then it’s good.
It’s fine, as long as you enable 2FA for Google and make sure to maintain access to the account you’re secure. It won’t have all the fancy features that some of the other apps have, but if it works for you then it’s good.
I use Bitwarden, and pay for their premium services. I really like it, it helps me keep track of all of my accounts, I’m able to keep all of my individual account passwords secure and unique, and I’m able to autofill my login credentials on all of my devices.
Yes, Sync for Lemmy has been confirmed to be in development. It has its own community and a channel on the Sync discord.
Same here. I actually really like the swipe gestures, I think it’s one of the only things that Boost is missing.
Because the goal was to ban third party apps and they don’t want people trying to dodge it. u/spez seems to be personally offended by their existence and wants them gone.
Yeah, I think this is done to provide the illusion of choice. The rate limits are high enough to allow personal emails through, but for any mass emails or corporate emails this forces you to use Google. Unfortunately a standard corporate strategy, it’s why corporate office suites are so generic and tend to be from one of the big companies.
I’ll be honest, I own so many games from the last sale that I’m probably going to sit this one out. I have something like 140 games, and of those the majority are on my backlog, so I won’t be running out any time soon.
That’s a sitewide setting, most apps and the main site have it.
I don’t use SteamOS, but there work for Linux gaming is undeniable. Proton does an excellent job running the majority of games, and the Steam Linux client runs very well.
I figured I’ll write up a tldr on Embrace, Extend, Extinguish in case you aren’t really feeling reading the articles.
Embrace: Meta builds a federated Twitter/Reddit alternative, potentially called Threads but is right now P92, that follows the ActivityPub standard almost perfectly. Various Lemmy and KBin instances federate with them and share information. Users from Facebook and Instagram flood into P92, making it one of the largest instances.
Extend: P92 starts adding nice, but proprietary features to their system. The allure of these features begins drawing users off of other instances to P92. Those instances are upset, but Meta insists it’s doing nothing wrong, continues to follow the ActivityPub standard in some form, and tells the other instances to just implement the features themselves.
Extinguish: Meta announces that due to incompatibility, they are withdrawing from the standard and defederating from everyone. Most users of this software are now on P92, and thus don’t mind. Meta gets a fully populated Twitter/Reddit alternative, and the remaining ActivityPub instances wither. Without user support, the standard fails, and a new open source alternative is created to replace it.
That strategy has been used to kill other open source protocols, and many people are worried it will happen again. My personal opinion is that servers should only federate with Meta if they follow the standard perfectly, and if they deviate even a little bit they should be universally defederated via software changes, but I’m sympathetic to the people that would rather be proactive than reactive.
The Verge’s coverage of this so far has been really good. It’s probably because they think drama like this will get a lot of clicks, but even still I’ve enjoyed their articles.
It’s exciting to see all these apps ramping up development. Honestly, the greatest gift that Reddit gave to the fediverse is sending all their former third party developers here, because that will greatly accelerate development.
I like it when various programs at least ask before invasively scraping my data. If asked, I’ll often say yes because I want to help the developers, but when it’s silent and in the background I have no control and I don’t like that
This is great news. People are correct when they say it too long, but even still I’m a lot happier to see news of things getting better rather than things getting worse.
I’m going to be honest, I think that this is a case where companies will always dodge the rules unless the consequences are so severe they’re unwilling to risk it. Something like forced downsizing, or a fine proportional to annual revenue. That would make companies significantly more hesitant to try and tread the line.
It’s mentioned in the comment section that the developer made /c/[email protected] as the community for the new project.
This sounds and looks really cool, looking forward to seeing its development
People disagreeing with you isn’t what an echo chamber is.
How old are those mobile devices?
Now that’s exciting, I’m looking forward to seeing the finished app