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  3. History will remember what they achieved here.

History will remember what they achieved here.

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ageverificationlinuxbsdprivacy
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  • glitchghost@retro-gaiden.comG glitchghost@retro-gaiden.com

    @itsfoss let's hope mint and fedora join the party

    nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
    nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
    nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.social
    wrote last edited by
    #15

    @GlitchGhost @itsfoss Mint is built on systemd and systemd is charging full steam ahead on complying in advance. Mint has experimented with rebasing on Debian to escape Canonical's clutches, but they haven't even tried getting rid of systemd at all yet as far as I know.

    Honestly that's the biggest problem. Most Linux systems rely on something that was already fundamentally way out of scope and that thing itself has decided to do this...

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    • itsfoss@mastodon.socialI itsfoss@mastodon.social

      History will remember what they achieved here. 🗿 ⚔️

      #ageverification #linux #bsd #privacy

      Link Preview Image
      nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
      nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
      nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.social
      wrote last edited by
      #16

      @itsfoss I'm still completely in shock that one person in systemd has decided arbitrarily to do this, is just pushing PRs through all over the place, and pretty much only has Claude to decide whether or not to approve them. Any opposition gets silenced with the threads just being closed because they're too inconvenient to moderate even though this is a really really big decision that affects... practically everything Linux...

      Honestly, systemd was already way out of scope. It's pretty much universally hated and it keeps taking it upon itself to do various things it shouldn't (like adding DNS handling for some reason. Why does something whose only purpose is to handle init and service starting/stopping running its own DNS handling?)

      Time for systemd to go.

      0x0@hachyderm.io0 1 Reply Last reply
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      • itsfoss@mastodon.socialI itsfoss@mastodon.social

        History will remember what they achieved here. 🗿 ⚔️

        #ageverification #linux #bsd #privacy

        Link Preview Image
        htpcnz@mastodon.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
        htpcnz@mastodon.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
        htpcnz@mastodon.social
        wrote last edited by
        #17

        @itsfoss wrong approach, malicious compliance is the way to go when the governments enact stupid legislations. Now a law can be passed on top to make anyone using a non compliant OS a criminal, are these orgs going to help out any of their users who get caught out?.

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        • nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.socialN nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.social

          @itsfoss I'm still completely in shock that one person in systemd has decided arbitrarily to do this, is just pushing PRs through all over the place, and pretty much only has Claude to decide whether or not to approve them. Any opposition gets silenced with the threads just being closed because they're too inconvenient to moderate even though this is a really really big decision that affects... practically everything Linux...

          Honestly, systemd was already way out of scope. It's pretty much universally hated and it keeps taking it upon itself to do various things it shouldn't (like adding DNS handling for some reason. Why does something whose only purpose is to handle init and service starting/stopping running its own DNS handling?)

          Time for systemd to go.

          0x0@hachyderm.io0 This user is from outside of this forum
          0x0@hachyderm.io0 This user is from outside of this forum
          0x0@hachyderm.io
          wrote last edited by
          #18

          @nazokiyoubinbou
          Should've never existed.
          Thankfully there are alternatives.
          @itsfoss

          nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.socialN 1 Reply Last reply
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          • 0x0@hachyderm.io0 0x0@hachyderm.io

            @nazokiyoubinbou
            Should've never existed.
            Thankfully there are alternatives.
            @itsfoss

            nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
            nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
            nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.social
            wrote last edited by
            #19

            @0x0 @itsfoss Yeah, but the biggest problem is like 95% of the distros out there are built around systemd. A lot of things aren't even setup to work right without it. For example, Pipewire-Pulse and similar services aren't even setup to work that way. (MX Linux has its own implementation, but I think they setup a .desktop file for the DE to run or something? It's probably not 100% reliable, especially if you ever log into something else, but it's getting me by ok on a single user system.)

            I have to figure out how to fix cdemu. Whatever it's doing, gcdemu freaks the F out and uses almost 40 watts of CPU power until I close the seizure-inducing freakout-mode icon. (I'll have to manually make a service?)

            I do hope everyone see this as a time to switch, but until they do it will hurt

            0x0@hachyderm.io0 1 Reply Last reply
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            • nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.socialN nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.social

              @0x0 @itsfoss Yeah, but the biggest problem is like 95% of the distros out there are built around systemd. A lot of things aren't even setup to work right without it. For example, Pipewire-Pulse and similar services aren't even setup to work that way. (MX Linux has its own implementation, but I think they setup a .desktop file for the DE to run or something? It's probably not 100% reliable, especially if you ever log into something else, but it's getting me by ok on a single user system.)

              I have to figure out how to fix cdemu. Whatever it's doing, gcdemu freaks the F out and uses almost 40 watts of CPU power until I close the seizure-inducing freakout-mode icon. (I'll have to manually make a service?)

              I do hope everyone see this as a time to switch, but until they do it will hurt

              0x0@hachyderm.io0 This user is from outside of this forum
              0x0@hachyderm.io0 This user is from outside of this forum
              0x0@hachyderm.io
              wrote last edited by
              #20

              @nazokiyoubinbou
              #Slackware, @Devuan, and #Antix are free by design.
              #Gentoo, to me, had the best approach: gives you choice of init system.
              @itsfoss

              nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.socialN S 2 Replies Last reply
              0
              • 0x0@hachyderm.io0 0x0@hachyderm.io

                @nazokiyoubinbou
                #Slackware, @Devuan, and #Antix are free by design.
                #Gentoo, to me, had the best approach: gives you choice of init system.
                @itsfoss

                nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
                nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
                nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.social
                wrote last edited by
                #21

                @0x0 @itsfoss Yes I am aware some do. That's why I mentioned one that does and said 95%, not 100%.

                Unfortunately, the other 95% are heavily built around it.

                And then, as I said, problems arise because so is a lot of software.

                Options existing is great, but they're so underutilized and undersupported that right now, systemd has a lot of power in the Linux world. And that is a problem.

                Linux can indeed, as a whole, move away fairly quickly if people put in the effort. But will they? You'd be surprised how many things just capitulate when a bit of effort might be involved in a thing. My bet is what we will see is a bunch deciding what it does right now is too small to fight and just let it happen, then it grows in increments over time, each too small to fight...

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                • 0x0@hachyderm.io0 0x0@hachyderm.io

                  @nazokiyoubinbou
                  #Slackware, @Devuan, and #Antix are free by design.
                  #Gentoo, to me, had the best approach: gives you choice of init system.
                  @itsfoss

                  S This user is from outside of this forum
                  S This user is from outside of this forum
                  seance_mpx@mastodon.social
                  wrote last edited by
                  #22

                  @0x0 gentoo is the best linux distribution, hands down. It requires a little bit more knowledge to get fluent in it, but when you do, having the ability to modify use flags/tailor your system as you need to ... it's great. I've got my entire system wired up with debug flags, for instance, so if i hit something strange in my software, I just inspect it. I can patch it if needed and then push the change upstream ; it's great, and is what computing promised to be before it was locked down.

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • natofe@lile.clN natofe@lile.cl

                    @itsfoss ¿FreeDOS "age verification"? 🤣

                    montyontherun@bitbang.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                    montyontherun@bitbang.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                    montyontherun@bitbang.social
                    wrote last edited by
                    #23

                    @natofe @itsfoss it was a serious discussion on the dev list. FreeDOS has (I think) two package managers (one for 16 bit and another for 32 bit machines).

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                    • garuda@social.garudalinux.orgG garuda@social.garudalinux.org shared this topic
                    • itsfoss@mastodon.socialI itsfoss@mastodon.social

                      History will remember what they achieved here. 🗿 ⚔️

                      #ageverification #linux #bsd #privacy

                      Link Preview Image
                      Y This user is from outside of this forum
                      Y This user is from outside of this forum
                      yggverse@mastodon.social
                      wrote last edited by
                      #24

                      @itsfoss MidnightBSD RIP
                      https://github.com/MidnightBSD/src/releases/tag/4.0.4

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