• @[email protected]
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    102 hours ago

    The main issue I have right now: the jurisdiction of this is in the US, and to be honest, I don’t trust the US that much when it comes to privacy laws regarding the (near) future.

  • @[email protected]
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    6 hours ago

    I donate to Ladybird and Servo, and I hope they succeed. We need serious competition and a check on Mozilla (not to mention Chrome and Safari).

    That said, I’m sad that neither Ladybird or Servo are licensed under strong copyleft licenses. We need user-oriented browsers now more than ever, and strong copyleft enables that. I worry that, even if these engines are successful, they will be co-opted by proprietary browsers and eventually superseded by them.

    This happened before - both Chrome and Safari ultimately derive from KHTML, Konqueror’s browser engine. If KHTML had been licnesed under the GPL instead of the LGPL, Chrome and Safari (and not just their engines) may have been free software today. Or, at the very least, it would have been much more difficult for Apple and Google to get started.

    That said, I wish Ladybird the best. There donation = no influence policy is excellent, and I really, really hope they can stick to it in the long term.

    • Phoenixz
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      73 hours ago

      No.

      If khtml had been GPL, it simply never would have been used for chrome or safari, some other engine would have been picked.

      Anything but real open source for these types of companies

    • @[email protected]
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      53 hours ago

      How does one have a donation = no influence policy?

      Huge companies donate to make open apps like this reliant on them. Then they threaten to pull the donation if that doesn’t happen…

      Strong Copyleft licenses protect from this by allowing others to fork and keep an app going without being taken advantage of.

      If Google donates 1 billion dollars tomorrow, and over several months, Ladybird will expand to use that money. Then Google can threaten to stop the donations unless LB does something like “make ad blockers worse”

      It’s a web browser. The only money they will make is from donations. Unless they do something wonky with their business model, like charge. Then no one will use it anyway.

    • @[email protected]
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      23 hours ago

      That would not have changed much, since browser engines are million-manhours projects and a small group of devs doing that voluntary, just isn’t enough.

    • @[email protected]
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      65 hours ago

      in my mind it’s kinda the point of Ladybird to have a permissively licensed implementation of web standards, I like permissive licenses if only because they reduce legal risks

        • @[email protected]
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          23 hours ago

          Copyleft licenses are harder to comply with, they usually come with clauses that can be interpreted in different ways, termination clauses, etc.

    • @Zangoose
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      35 hours ago

      Isn’t servo mostly a Mozilla-led project? I thought servo would probably just replace gecko as the engine firefox used if it ends up succeeding

  • troed
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    74 hours ago

    Alright, read up on it a bit more. Sadly the language choices (C++ now, maybe Swift later) rubs me the wrong way for something that needs to be incredibly secure against attacks. I really really support additional browser engines, but likely not this one.

    Thus I think Servo is a better choice for those looking to contribute. IMHO.

    • @[email protected]
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      103 hours ago

      Quite happy to see Servo coming along again. I am still excited for Ladybird and it seems more likely to deliver a truly viable browser sooner.

      I am not a Swift dev but I think it has decent memory safety as well. I think it is one of the reasons Ladybird is moving to it. They evaluated Rust and decided it lacked the OOP features they needed.

      The C++ that Ladybird writes is also very good. They have their own standard library (written for SerenityOS) which is very modern including memory safety and security. Still C++ though of course.

    • @[email protected]
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      23 hours ago

      Ladybird says 2026. Given the current state and progress, I believe it may be quite usable by then. I use it sometimes for basic surfing and leaving forum comments. It works surprisingly well often though it is still far from general use. I think the dev team tries to use it themselves for things like Discord and GutHub. They did a demo last month where it “almost” ran Gmail.

      I am not sure that Servo has set a timeline. I expect it to take longer.

  • troed
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    25911 hours ago

    Join our Discord server

    crying in decentralization efforts

      • @[email protected]
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        84 hours ago

        because a turn key platform they don’t have to self host and maintain frees them up to do the work.

    • @[email protected]
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      949 hours ago

      The Discord-based “support” makes it a “meh.” The main devs alt-right BS makes it a “hard pass.”

      • @Imhotep
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        6 hours ago

        Lemmy was created by a tankie, many of whose opinions I abhor.

        As long as it’s FOSS and doesn’t inherently promote their beliefs, I will use the software.

        I agree it’s not great and I’d prefer if it weren’t made by imbeciles

          • FundMECFS
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            43 hours ago

            Both facists and tankies have genocided disabled people and selectively killed anarchists.

            As a disabled anarchist, they end up seeming pretty similar to me.

          • @cmhe
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            7 hours ago

            TBH, it is very difficult to me differentiating between the different flavors of authoritarians.

            Maybe someone can make an easy to understand comparison matrix? You know, “Kills people because they have a different opinion.”, “Suppresses minorities.”, etc.

            • Natanael
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              44 hours ago

              There’s basically ideologues versus hateful people versus indifferent sociopaths (overlap is common)

              I consider political ideologues and “technocrats” and extremely pedantic rule-following bureaucrats to be different flavors of ideologues (has a specific worldview they try to enforce / uphold)

            • @[email protected]
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              4 hours ago

              Fascism, just like Communism or even a Dictatorships are not inherently bad.

              We as humans key in on the oppressive authoritarianism of them as the evil in the system.

              That’s why I’d recommend you lump them all together as “oppressive authoritarianism” until one of them proves us otherwise, and not to need to find the nuances between them to prove they’re bad.

              • @[email protected]
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                114 hours ago

                Fascism, just like Communism or even a Dictatorships are not inherently bad

                No offense but what the fuck are you even saying

                Fascism is absolutely inherently bad, there is no removal of its evil, oppressive, and authoritarian traits after which anything is left.

                • @Eldritch
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                  136 minutes ago

                  In their defense, if everyone was perfect everything would be perfect.

                  But you’re absolutely right. As long as humans are human there’s no way to separate human nature from authority. And as a result, any system that doesn’t strictly limit scope and authority is inherently bad.

        • Chloé 🥕
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          5 hours ago

          i know there was a thing at the beginning of the project where they wrote a lot of the documentation with masculine pronouns (assuming the reader was male), and when they were asked to change that for gender neutral pronouns, they said no because “they don’t want politics in their project”

          beyond that however, idk if they eventually changed that or if they did other bad stuff

          edit: here is a source

          • @[email protected]
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            224 minutes ago

            Not really. A random person submitted a PR with just one pronoun change in the code comments (not the documentation, and not anything remotely visible to the end user).

            The developer rejected the (useless, in my opinion) PR.

    • @douglasg14b
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      14111 hours ago

      Hell, even worse, crying in the lost information. Discord is a black hole where community knowledge goes to die.

      It’s the worst.

      • MrScottyTay
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        489 hours ago

        I hate it so much, even when I NEED to go there for help and support, I know I’m lonely the tenth person to ask the same question. I honestly don’t know why so many people love this way of support, just document it!

    • @rottingleaf
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      69 hours ago

      What’s the worst - Discord doesn’t seem to provide any particular convenience over Mumble for voice calls while playing games or anything else. Just being in one app in one place is its advantage.

      It’s like Telegram, just better quality, worse optimization, more moderation.

    • @Matriks404
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      106 hours ago

      Again this shit. This have been debunked many times, yet people still write this nonsense.

    • @rickdg
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      459 hours ago

      Looks like a confused Swedish dude that when questioned about his use of English pronouns defaults to not wanting to get political. Is there more besides a misguided decision to avoid relevant political topics?

      I think we should chastise people that insist on not getting political, but not necessarily boycott everything they do. Or at least we should apply the same moral demands to Mozilla, Apple, Microsoft or Google when choosing which browsers to support. Which of them is the least bad?

        • @rickdg
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          66 hours ago

          Don’t think we should be scared of the word “political” or “ideology”.

          • @[email protected]
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            44 hours ago

            You’re right, words are meaningless and language has no bearing on society at large. after all, fuiebt eidiowb rhe efifo quifopim.

            • @[email protected]
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              127 minutes ago

              There’s a big difference between negating the existence of people and what happend in this case, i.e. somebody writing a comment (only visible to him and other developers) using the male form.

          • @[email protected]
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            Language is extremely powerful. This is all part of the erasure (an integral part btw).

            • @[email protected]
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              Hmm I don’t think you really understand what happened.

              The developer wrote a comment (not visible to the end user) using the male form.

              A random person opened a pull request without any useful changes, except for changing that comment from “he” to “their”.

              The developer rejected that PR because it’s politically motivated and it doesn’t add anything else.

    • @[email protected]
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      46 hours ago

      Totally excessive in view of the facts.

      There are so few alternative browsers and the collapse of the privacy is so global. That seems to me a minor point in relation to the goal.

    • @[email protected]
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      87 hours ago

      I see zero reason to out the “transphobic” label on the dev.

      Think and read before labelling people.

    • katy ✨
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      1810 hours ago

      ugh transphobia rots people’s brains

      it’s not too hard to just be a decent person ppl

      • @Matriks404
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        36 hours ago

        Sure, but there’s no transphobia here. Stop spreading nonsense.

        • @NoSpotOfGround
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          43 hours ago

          Ok, you keep saying that but never explain why/how. Like, why refuse such a small change so aggressively?

    • dumnonii
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      911 hours ago

      I can’t see anything about this on DuckDuckGo. Do you have a link?

        • @[email protected]
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          7 hours ago

          I’m surprised this got any kind of attention.

          Here’s the turn of events from my perspective:

          1. Someone submits a 1-line PR changing the gender used in a code comment
          2. PR rejected on the grounds that the change is “politically motivated”
          3. Submitter got mad, and proposed removing the rule against “politically motivated” changes, calling it “white supremacist,” which is closed
          4. Someone wrote a blog post about it

          Here’s my analysis:

          1. Stupid change - don’t make PRs that simply correct an irrelevant typo in a comment somewhere; some people do this to put stuff on a resume (look at how much FOSS work I do!), and it just wastes everyone’s time
          2. Stupid response - it should’ve been rejected because it’s a useless change, not because it’s “politically motivated”
          3. Stupid proposal - do you really want to waste a bunch of time fighting over wording in a comment? Because that’s the kind of crap you get without a rule like this.
          4. This is all about an irrelevant change to a comment? Why is this getting so much attention?
          • @[email protected]
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            23 hours ago

            I should be an idiot. I dont see a direct relationship between race and sexual orientation. Even if the PR was rejected because a pronounce how the hell this is white supremacist?

            • @[email protected]
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              23 hours ago

              Well, didn’t the Nazis also discriminate against gay people?

              That said, it’s a massive leap to go from “rejects 1 line PR that only changes gender in a comment” to literal Nazi…

          • @surewhynotlem
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            07 hours ago

            “comments must be accurate,” is not a rule you should bend. Bending it even a little leads to last programming and shit code.

            • @[email protected]
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              True, but that only applies if it’s misleading. For example:

              // pythagoran theorem 
              distance = abs(p2.x - p1.x) + abs(p2.y - p1.y); 
              

              Fixing that makes sense because it’s wrong and misleading (it’s actually Manhattan distance), and a quick glace is insufficient to tell the difference.

              But fixing a typo or something that wouldn’t be confusing is just noise and should only be fixed with other changes. For example, I intentionally misspelled Pythagorean in my comment above, fixing that to be the right spelling would be a useless change, even if the distance formula used the hypotenuse. It wouldn’t be an unreasonable policy to reject PRs that only fix spelling or similar to reduce noise for the maintainers.

              • @surewhynotlem
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                34 hours ago

                Yep, I understand but disagree. Maybe it comes from working with so many ESL coders, but I’ll happily accept typo corrections because it’s not always obvious what words should be if you’re not steeped in the culture.

                • @[email protected]
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                  4 hours ago

                  It really depends on the project.

                  If you’re a larger project, you can see a ton of these from people hoping to land a commit to put “contributor to X” on a resume somewhere. Those add up and are really distracting and possibly automated. They waste everyone’s time, especially if they spawn a bunch of conversion like this did.

                  If you’re a smaller project, it doesn’t matter as much. I work with ESL coders too, so I get it (1/4 of my office is ESL immigrants, and ~2/3 of the broader team is ESL). I fix comments all the time, I just include them with other changes.

                  So it depends. But in general, a high profile project should reject this noise to discourage this behavior.

        • @DreamlandLividity
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          10 hours ago

          “We don’t accept ideologically motivated changes” = White supremacist language… Yeah, sounds about like what I expected…

        • @[email protected]
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          07 hours ago

          DDG search is garbage, I’m sorry… Whenever I switch to a browser that defaults to it, I’m reminded why I always switch it back to Google (unfortunately). Even Yandex is better, and that’s prob Russian spyware.

          • breadguy
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            96 hours ago

            there’s startpage which is a Google wrapper if you’re interested

            • @[email protected]
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              26 hours ago

              Actually just tried this for the first time yesterday after switching to librewolf. Have only used it once, but already seems better than DDG.

      • @[email protected]
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        210 hours ago

        It was a niche story, I’ll have to dig through the GitHub issues. Basically someone tried to change the documentation pronouns to be gender neutral rather than masculine and the lead dev had a freak out and refused. Really soured me on the project

        • @[email protected]
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          Someone else posted a writeup about it.

          It wasn’t in documentation, but a code comment. No user would see this.

          One part was a rejected change on the README, which was trying to remove this “white supremacist language”:

          ## On ideologically motivated changes

          This is a purely technical project. As such, it is not an appropriate arena to advertise your personal politics or religious beliefs. Any changes that appear ideologically motivated will be rejected.

          Someone changing “he” to “they” (original PR that started all this) in a comment as their only change could absolutely be seen as “politically motivated.” My understanding is that if changing the comment was part of some larger useful change, it would be fine (as would using “she” or “they” in a new comment), but just changing the gender of a pronoun in a comment is a useless change.

          If the comment said “she,” would someone have been motivated to make this change? Probably not. Should changing this from “she” to some other pronoun (he or they) also be rejected? Yes, on the same grounds as changing it from “he,” it’s not a useful change and just wastes everyone’s time. If you’re in the code already, then go ahead, correct silly language like this if you care to.

            • @[email protected]
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              022 minutes ago

              They are political, because people (I’m not one of them) think they shouldn’t be allowed and there are only two genders (e.g. the current president of the US).

            • @[email protected]
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              43 hours ago

              I never said they were.

              Someone changing “he” to “they” (original PR that started all this) in a comment as their only change could absolutely be seen as “politically motivated.”

              Look at the fallout in the comments on those PRs, it quickly devolved into politics and quickly away from any technical merit.

              If this exact same change were included with other changes, I highly doubt anyone would’ve cared about the comment. The issue isn’t with the text of the comment, but with the likely motivation and the actual merits of the PR. Many projects immediately reject tiny PRs because they clog up the review queue, and that appears to be what’s happening here, plus all the political nonsense in the issue comments.

        • @doodledup
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          1310 hours ago

          Freakout? Didn’t he just reject?

    • @theherk
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      I didn’t know anything about this, but it doesn’t sound as bad with context.

      edit: Removed link to a site which shouldn’t be receiving more traffic. I should have vetted it more thoroughly.

      • gon [he]
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        That blog post is pretty ridiculous, IMO.

        You’ll see the alt-right do that a lot, for some reason.

        There’s real criticism, but they always mix it in with some made-up complaints like the slavery thing, which is some of the most obvious sarcasm I have ever seen on the internet, but somehow taken literally by the author of the post.

        IDK if he’s a transphobe or whatnot, but his reaction to the change in language was indicative of, at the very least—with the most charitable of interpretations—, a disregard for inclusive language and, more realistically, some philosophy that doesn’t allow for “others” to participate because the existence of those that aren’t male is “political,” somehow.

        You might not see it, because you haven’t seen it enough times to recognize it, but it happens again and again and again… But it’s always quiet.

        “Don’t make this political,” “ideology isn’t welcome,” stuff like that. Statements that sound reasonable, but are only wielded to quiet those aiming for inclusiveness and acceptance of marginalized people.

        It might sound like a less-than-generous interpretation, a bit callous and over-zealous, but it’s just patterns. I hear wolf, I say wolf.

        Also, I thought that article had a really funny passage:

        One activist (“cafkafk”) seen below, within the GitHub repository for the developer being attacked, celebrating the fact that other activists – organized on “The Fediverse” – had arrived to harass the Ladybird developer.

        This alone made me think that it might be satire, but I don’t think it is… The Fediverse, huh? OK.

        • @[email protected]
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          57 hours ago

          I would’ve rejected the PR too, but not for violation of that rule, but because one-line changes that merely fix a comment waste everyone’s time reviewing it, and are often just to build someone’s resume. I’ve even seen some that remove trailing whitespace.

          If you want to fix it alongside other changes, go for it (and the reviewer said as much on the PR). But if you’re only interested in sending in drive-by commits to build a resume or something and aren’t actually interested in helping, then it should be rejected as noise.

          If there’s a broader pattern of this, maybe that’s cause for concern. But if it’s literally just this instance, I could see the dev being annoyed at drive-by PRs.

          • gon [he]
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            07 hours ago

            I would’ve rejected the PR too, but not for violation of that rule, but because one-line changes that merely fix a comment waste everyone’s time reviewing it, and are often just to build someone’s resume.

            That’s exactly what I was talking about. You’re taking what they said reasonably, because you’re probably a reasonable person! However, look at what they’re actually saying. The issue wasn’t framed as being a “drive-by,” though later that’s what they claimed. It was about ideology. It was about politics. They didn’t pull up rules about one-line changes to justify not accepting them, they pulled up rules about talking politics.

            The problem wasn’t that it was a meaningless PR, the problem was that it was a meaningful PR that they disagreed with.

            And, quite frankly, disagreeing with that does make you an asshole, at the very least, and a transphobic misogynist, at worst. There were at least a few PRs open about similar issues, too.

            Look, I’m not calling him a transphobe or a misogynist; I’m just saying this was an asshole thing to do, and it was done in an asshole way, and that allowing this sort of thing to exist, especially in FOSS, is not good. That’s all.

            Check this out: https://mkultra.monster/tech/2024/07/03/serenityos-and-ladybird

            • @[email protected]
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              The issue wasn’t framed as being a “drive-by,” though later that’s what they claimed. It was about ideology.

              But that’s the problem, it’s both a drive-by, useless change and a politically motivated one. If you show up to a project and submit a change that violates multiple rules, it’s dealer’s choice which one to pick.

              With asynchronous discussions like this, it’s impossible to know their motivations, so it’s helpful to assume the best instead of the worst.

              Check this out: https://mkultra.monster/tech/2024/07/03/serenityos-and-ladybird

              From that:

              In order to not look like I’m just repeating myself over and over, here is another pull request where a user fixed the specifically gendered language, and was denied

              Here’s the PR in question. It was merged, probably because it didn’t just change “he” to “they” in one spot (but did just that in a few spots), but actually fixed confusing language.

              And then after it was merged, there were tons of irrelevant comments about the policy and other PRs.

              The one I pulled here included changes from the other rejected PRs. Maybe this was by a different reviewer, idk. That said, it’s still a little iffy since it’s just fixing grammar and especially pronouns that aren’t really relevant to the code it’s commenting.

              I probably would’ve accepted that last one because it fixes stuff in a lot of places rather than one (quantity has a quality of its own), and accepting it will hopefully stop PR spam.

              Look, I’m not calling him a transphobe or a misogynist

              He may be. Idk.

              My criticisms here go to everyone involved:

              • reviewer should’ve rejected the PRs because they’re noisy, not because they’re “political”
              • submitter shouldn’t just submit a 1-line grammar fix in a comment
              • github users shouldn’t brigade, discussion should be technical
              • blog author should be more accurate (see above)

              It’s stupid drama all around.

              Fixing comments is fine. If you’re going to only fix comments, at least fix a bunch of them at once, and ideally more than just a pronoun or grammar mistake here and there. English isn’t everyone’s first language, so assume the best and don’t waste everyone’s time with useless changes.

              • gon [he]
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                16 hours ago

                Sigh, you do have a point.

                Maybe this was by a different reviewer, idk.

                It was. Some other member of SerenityOS, not the person behind Ladybird (awesomekling).

                blog author should be more accurate (see above)

                That’s fair. I’ll say though, the blog post is dated from 1 day after the PR was actually merged. It’s not unreasonable to think that, when they wrote it, it really hadn’t been merged and they only saw the initial denial citing the policy.

                He may be. Idk.

                Yeah, I was just trying to say that that wasn’t the point of my rant. I get it I get it.

                • @[email protected]
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                  It’s not unreasonable to think that, when they wrote it, it really hadn’t been merged and they only saw the initial denial citing the policy.

                  That never happened on this PR. The only human reply before the merge (aside from the submitter) was this:

                  Please fix the commit messages (see BuggieBot’s comment); and maybe this can go in one commit? Doesn’t really need to be 5 separate ones.

                  And this is BuggieBot’s comment:

                  Hello!

                  One or more of the commit messages in this PR do not match the SerenityOS code submission policy, please check the lint_commits CI job for more details on which commits were flagged and why.
                  Please do not close this PR and open another, instead modify your commit message(s) with git commit --amend and force push those changes to update this PR.

                  It’s a completely different.

                  This, plus the tone of the blog post looks like they were on a crusade instead of trying to accurately portray events.

                  Sorry to beat a dead horse here, my point is that we all need to be careful jumping to conclusions, especially in FOSS where discussion almost exclusively happens asynchronously in text and with people with different backgrounds. Pretty much everyone involved failed at that.

                  I agree with the rest.

        • exu
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          1510 hours ago

          Lunduke is definitely right wing and has been for years

          • @[email protected]
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            37 hours ago

            Lunduke used to be somewhat interesting, and I enjoyed his “Linux sucks” series, but he really has doubled down on political nonsense.

            • @[email protected]
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              I disagree with Lunduke videos, specailly when he tried to bork Rust as a bad language without knowing single shit of rust programming. But if he was left wing we weren’t having this conversation. People from moderate right should be excluded? I’m not talking about Lunduke here, but In general.

              • @[email protected]
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                23 hours ago

                Exactly!

                I dislike tech people who mix politics into their work, even if I agree with their opinions. If you do both, just keep them separate, like separate YouTube channels or blogs or whatever. Lunduke doesn’t do that, and many of his tech takes are colored by that as well, so I ignore him.

            • @Matriks404
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              Definitely. Even other series were interesting. I especially like his perspective of how much bloated software currently is.

              …but I ultimately unsubscribed him, because the most videos were alt-right bullshit, without providing even credible sources on the biggest claims. Definitely NOT give him any traffic anymore, he doesn’t deserve it.

        • @[email protected]
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          109 hours ago

          Because it is. A quote from the linked page on asahi linux devs leaving twitter because of rising anti trans rhetoric

          ““Half of us are trans,” he says. Accompanied by a call to “fight back” against an imagined “genocide”, assumedly perpetrated by those who do not fully buy into his particular sexual fetish.”

          The blogs author purposely misgenders Alyssa Rosensweig and refers to being trans as a sexual fetish, which makes their politics obscenely clear. Further, Alyssa has a resume of amazing accomplishments in reverse engineering the apple m1 and m2 chips and developing graphics drivers for their gpus. Lundukes resume is basically growing up as a nerd and being a “tech blogger” from early in the game and going full qanon a few years ago

          Further in the article he references hector Martin saying that people demanding to keep politics out of tech is bullshit because tech is made by humans and anti trans rhetoric is going to kill his colleagues. His response to this:

          “Of course nobody is trying to kill Hector’s colleagues.

          And the vast majority of major corporations – not to mention the President of the country – are continually coming out in support of the Trans fetish. So declaring that there is a genocide occuring is beyond ridiculous.”

          So that didn’t age well (from less than 2 years ago)

        • @theherk
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          08 hours ago

          I don’t know. But rather than just accepting the assertion, I did a cursory search. This turned up and I perused it. I didn’t see anything damning and thought maybe somebody could clarify. I am absolutely not trying to defend anybody, but I didn’t spend much time on it. Sorry folks.

          Maybe he is a bad guy. Truly, I didn’t know.

        • @theherk
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          48 hours ago

          My mistake. I didn’t look far enough into it. But the accusation was made without context so I didn’t know. I’m not trying to defend him.

          • @[email protected]
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            58 hours ago

            Stay vigilant. Content about “Political correctness gone mad!” is step one of the alt-right pipeline.

            • @[email protected]
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              03 hours ago

              Don’t you think for a second that talking like this is indicative of extremism, polarization, even fanatism? It is ok to take political posture, but this is excessive

            • @[email protected]
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              37 hours ago

              It also can be a reasonable take though, and you’ll need more context to distinguish it.

              In this case, Lunduke has a history of injecting politics where it doesn’t belong, which is a shame because I used to watch some of his content (esp. his “Linux sucks” series). But now it’s filled with nonsense.

              My point is, don’t write someone off because they don’t want politics or political correctness in their project. Write them off when they use that excuse to silence things they don’t like and allow things they do.

  • kamen
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    47 hours ago

    Politics aside, I’d be curious to see how far something like this can go. Can’t not think of Opera Software - even they were not successful while they were using their own proprietary tech.

  • @superfes
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    6012 hours ago

    Good, the world is in dire need of competition in this arena.

  • Aproposnix
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    1311 hours ago

    We definitely need more competition in the browser space, I just wish it wasn’t using such a permissive license as the BSD.

    • @[email protected]
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      57 hours ago

      You’re free to fork and use a more restrictive license, that’s one of the cool things about BSD licenses. It’s not like it’s something dumb like the CDDL, which is incompatible with the GPL (and many other licenses) and the reason ZFS can’t be directly included in the kernel.

  • @daggermoon
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    49 hours ago

    I’ve been testing it out, it’s pretty fucking rad.

  • @[email protected]
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    410 hours ago

    You can compare the WPT test results of many different browsers here. Its surprising to me that Servo lags behind Ladybird in successfully passed WPT tests.