Do you still believe you have a right to choose in this system?
Do you still believe you have a right to choose in this system?
Yep. And in the meantime I’m building a censorship resistant sharing protocol. But sadly few people are interested.
Edit: if you have adresses, I’m interested.
My protocol lives hidden on the classic internet, so it needs a running connection (it works very well but lacks interested people).
Offline data sharing is a fascinating concept, and I think we underestimate its potential. I mean my dinky smartphone has 1TB storage, in ten years it will probably be cheap to have active 10TB USB keys that shares data with others and we can just swap millions of things with people very easily. Probably slower than today’s internet but people usually figure out how to make things usable.
As with my protocol, there must just be enough people for it to start functioning, and with physical drives it must be in a specific location. Maybe smartphones can do the job to bootstrap it all?
Very interesting.
I was also spamming Hungarian MEPs for what good it did.
I feel like this and SKG were both nice “come together” activism moments for the EU nerd community. And while SKG was important as well, Chat Control was really an “end of democracy” moment and I love that we the people could shine the light on it so hard that it got abandoned until next time.
Not letting my guard down. If we go past April, it suddenly becomes possible that Hungary will also flip on the issue.
People say that “they will push again and again” but that’s just how politics works. You have to go vote every time, get informed - reasonably, don’t turn yourself into a terminally online Twitter-zombie, read news outlets that do a big piece every week, not 24/7 reports on tweets - get active all the time, because this is your lives, your kids’ and parents’ and partners’ and friends’ lives that gets decided about. Political engagement turns your country into something like the Nordics, disengagement takes you to Russia, maybe even literally these days.
If I was a schoolteacher with high school kids, I’d make them go on the ECI website, and check out the petitions, read them, and sign what they agree with, and try to instill a habit of doing so every few months. I do this, and I signed petitions that sounded right to me and I could verify with minimal research that they were benevolent. It takes zero time, and lets you push a continent of societies towards a better future ever so slightly.