huppakee @ huppakee @lemm.ee Posts 19Comments 973Joined 1 mo. ago

Considering you say that I don't think you're up to date as to how voting 'works' in Turkey nowadays.
I wouldn't say they ignore it, more they're too naive or misinformed to understand it's a problem.
Which one? TurkmeniGovernmentNet or TurkmeniOppositionNet?
I believe those laws target the author, so their main goal wouldn't be to take the content down but figure out who wrote it. I think when it comes to 'real' censorship you still want both to happen but it would be much more importent to get the content deleted.
Which is not part of Bluesky, only proving the point having a central system controlling the data makes the data vulnerable.
Decentralization isn't done to hide the author, federating content works because the content is spread beyond a central owner. I don't know if you ever used a peer-2-peer network like you do when you torrent a movie, but the concept is very similar. It is harder to censor something because you have more places you need to censor.
Imagine you are in a country where a lot of information is censored and you want to spread a message. Would you pick 1 giant billboard in the city center or would you make a bunch of leaflets you secretly hand out to someone you trust, hoping they will give the information along to someone they trust etc? Obviously, one giant billboard is easier to take down by the censoring government. That is why decentralisation does in fact work against censorship.
Anonymity or 'layers of privacy' are useful if you don't want to be caught as the author of the message. In that case it is not about running the instance over Tor, but accessing the instance over Tor. You wouldn't even need to use tor if you can trust your computer isn't infected and you acces the instance through a VPN and remove all new data (e.g. cookies) from your pc before you disconnect your vpn.
You get it, they'll just do what they did with torrents and p2p networks. /s
But Turkey blocking acces to certain content is not the same as removing the content (which is what Bluesky does when they honour a request).
But now they are not targeting the person posting it, they are targeting the platform it is posted to. If we let them they can censor the whole internet Bluesky.
Can Turkey ask for any account/post to be banned regardless of where a post was written? For example, if I were to register there and called Erdogan a dictator who suppresses the Turks by breaking down the media and justice system and he is taking political prisoners; could he then ask BlueSky to get my account removed because i'm breaking a law in Turkey even though I am not in Turkey? That sounds totally crazy. Like from now on you can make laws on your citizens, your lands and all of the internet? What the fu. e: typo
No offense but I think your effort is wasted on the people (already) here.
On the one hand it is crazy, on the other hand I suppose you don't even need that many 'policemen' on the interwebs to clean it up compared to the amount of (secret) policemen you need to keep the physical country 'clean'.
Well this is actually a sensor and not an implant, but I also would need to trust the makers before I put this on my head.
I was referring only to why western governments are holding on to Israel, the fact there are also Jews protesting Israel doesn't seem to mean much to them. But I'm not saying this is the only reason, just wanted to say it is not only because Israel is a military partner in the middle east.
If you browse my comments to other posts you'd easily see I'm not on Israel's side buddy
I'm not expecting to 'win the fight', but I'm not gonna stop answering because people think I'm payed by Israel or something. I upvote this guy's posts on news about Gaza regularly but he treats me as an enemy from my first comment. Just wanted to provide context but it is clearly not appreciated.
The police [will] use any excuse to suppress people
Maybe in your country, here the police is not considered an enemy of the people in general. Not speaking for all of them and definitely not the guys in the video.
by claiming the protestors are even doing any bad
You don't understand, my point is that the guys doing the bad thing are not part of the group of protesters.
I didn't suggest anything and if you don't mind a company earning money with your data I'm not gonna stop you.
There is a lot of people who don't know that sites collect data even if you don't click any links. I like it when people make a well-informed decision and didn't know you were aware of that. You can overcome that by blocking trackers, hiding your IP and removing cookies after a visit. I'd much sooner getting tools to do that then declaring certain sites off-limits.
Not an email provider but I've been using addy.io (https://addy.io/) for a few weeks now and I feel it deserves a shout out. They let you use email aliases to protect your real email. There is a good free option which I use.
I had been using DuckDuckGo's version (https://duckduckgo.com/email/) but they require you to use their browser on mobile or their extension on desktop. Also free.
I'm very happy with proton's service and products (email/calender/drive) so even with the asshole CEO it still feels like good choice. Maybe not as good as some other options out there, most likely would have chosen Tuta if I would switch now.