• tired_n_bored
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    1 year ago

    I personally feel that open source gives me technological freedom. I’m free to change something if I don’t like it, freedom to analyze the code, freedom to fix something etc, which closed source software takes away from me even if I don’t exercise that right.

    For example I’d rather live in a country with freedom of speech even if I had nothing to say, because if I wanted, I could do it.

    As I said in another comment, it must exist a balance. If an app is closed source but way much better than an open source alternative, then it’s probably wiser to use that. The thing I do not agree with you is saying “FOSS is useless because I don’t check the code”, but you do you and have your opinions, that’s alright.

    Don’t assume people who disagree with you to be stupid, because that’s the vibe I got from your comment. I think I am intelligent enough not to give myself warm and fuzzies over something so shallow, knowing from the beginning that my “analysis” was never supposed to be an audit.

    P.S. I’m not blaming you, nor anyone else, for using what suits you the best.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      I never presented the opinion that FOSS is useless. I’m saying FOSS isn’t inherently more secure or private than a commercial or closed source app.

      Sometimes FOSS apps are great, often times they are janky…which has been my experience with every FOSS lemmy app I’ve tried. Sometimes too their overall value compensates for the jank, but not here imo.

      I’ve just noticed that a lot of the privacy focused or obsessed often just roll with what they know or what they read, while still taking big leaps of trust with total strangers and thinking they’re perfectly secure and seemingly ignoring that threats even exist in that environment.

      • tired_n_bored
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        11 year ago

        I misunderstood your previous comment then. Apologies for that