

Lack of electoral reform: https://fairvote.org/


Lack of electoral reform: https://fairvote.org/


If you are concerned about France, why did your comment only reference “the Netherlands”?
If you wanted to give an example of a country where about one-third of people speak English, you could have used Italy or maybe Poland (“However, other surveys show that over 50% of Poles can speak English. Another study shows that 89% of Polish students are learning and/or can speak English.”).
I recall seeing something like https://jamstack.org/generators/ and maybe https://github.com/myles/awesome-static-generators in the past, but I prefer to use https://orgmode.org/manual/HTML-export-commands.html and something similar to https://about.gitlab.com/blog/gitlab-pages-setup/#option-a-gitlab-ci-for-plain-html-websites
https://docs.gitlab.com/user/project/pages/getting_started/pages_new_project_template/#project-templates might be interesting to you


These might help you choose a destination / get another passport: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiple_citizenship https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jus_soli https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jus_sanguinis


These might help you choose a destination: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiple_citizenship https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jus_sanguinis
We only recommend F-Droid as a way to obtain apps which cannot be obtained via the means above.
The “means above” that I see are:
I don’t see any mean “below” F-Droid.
I don’t think that privacyguides.org will have to be updated significantly if something related to F-Droid happens since it already documents that “there are some security-related downsides to how F-Droid builds, signs, and delivers packages”. It’s clear to me that using F-Droid should only be used when it’s clear that all other means will fail to produce suitable results.


There is an extremely long history of discussion about Clarence Thomas and stare decisis / precedent.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/04/us/politics/clarence-thomas-supreme-court-precedent.html
There is at least one more 🙂


If this post communicated information about a recent event, I would have been quite interested in it. Since it does not, I am disappointed.


Updated 1:33 AM EDT, July 24, 2024
Does this qualify as “news”, considering that the word “new” is embedded in “news”?


Having one page for each topic and providing a link to a relevant page when it’s useful means that it’s less likely that contradictory or outdated information will be provided. The link to the “android distributions” page is currently quite prominent: https://github.com/privacyguides/privacyguides.org/blame/78726b4c4af8bee974559398c1920ea0f65cd2dc/docs/mobile-phones.md#L37
The “mobile-phones” page is currently quite coupled to Google Pixel phones right now. I would prefer for there to be another type of phone that has been found to be suitable to use, but in the meantime while that is not the case it’s probably better to have a page that explains Google Pixel phones in a great amount of detail and indicates that information about Recommended Android Distributions is important.


Your reference to Google makes me think you didn’t absorb all the available information.


I used to think like this. However, if someone says, “The most expensive phone I can afford is embedded with unremovable Israeli spyware, and there is no operating system that is open-source and receives regular security patches available for it, and I can’t afford to pay for internet access, so I use the platform that only lets me access Facebook”, I’m not sure that there’s much I can do to help them. If someone said, “Can I use a phone that costs less because it’s subsidized by Facebook while being protected from malware and surveillance?” I’d respond with, “The answer is probably ‘no’”. I’m sure that it’s possible to be in a situation where the only choice is to have no internet access at all or to use the internet in a way that makes one vulnerable to surveillance, and I think it’s likely that getting more money is the most reliable cure for that situation (and it might be true that no other cure exists).
privacyguides.org probably has a target audience of people that are being actively targeted by sophisticated government actors, and displaying information about a measure that is inferior to another measure in every way other than cost would make it more likely that someone would use the inferior measure in an inappropriate situation, and that could cause someone to be in physical danger, so it’s probably best to just not mention any measure unless it might be superior to all other measures in some situation (without considering monetary cost). For people that are subject to less physical danger but more cost restrictions, it’d probably be better to have a separate website. I do think that such a website would probably have less funding available (since privacyguides.org will probably receive funding from the audience that is mostly unencumbered by resource constraints, so any other website will probably receive less funding) and therefore less expertise available, which would be regrettable (since I do have old phones that I’d like to make more secure).
There was a time when there was no formal recommendation for computing hardware from privacyguides.org at all, so having one at all is an improvement compared to the past. It’s unfortunate that there aren’t two options that meet the documented criteria, but having one is better than having none. For now, the best we can hope for is probably a phone model that meets relevant criteria (or where the only unmet criteria could be met due to new software being made available) becoming more popular, such that its price comes down due to having an economy of scale. Hopefully that will be a phone model not influenced by Google.
https://www.msn.com/de-de/nachrichten/other/donald-trump-gibt-mit-iq-tests-an-der-eigentlich-ein-einfacher-demenz-test-war/ar-AA1PlFO2