I’m not actually sure if this works but If anyone else wants to try it out and give me feedback feel free.
Configure Tor to use only exit nodes from countries with few or no YouTube ads.
WARNING: Do not try this unless you understand the implications it has for your system wide tor setup. TorBrowser does way more than merely proxy Traffic through Tor, but also prevent #InformationLeakage and block tracking code. This is not a substitute for using the TorBrowser and does not improve your anonymity.
Edit /etc/tor/torrc:
ExitNodes {AL},{MD},{GE},{AM}{VN}
StrictNodes 1
Then restart Tor:
sudo systemctl restart tor
1. Add a new proxy:
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Host | 127.0.0.1 |
| Port | 9050 |
| Type | SOCKS5 |
2. Set proxy mode to: Proxy by Patterns
3. Add URL patterns and assign them to the proxy above:
| Pattern | Purpose |
|---|---|
*youtube.com/* | Main site |
*youtu.be/* | Short links |
*ytimg.com/* | Thumbnails and assets |
*googlevideo.com/* | Video stream data |
ytimg.comandgooglevideo.comare required – without them thumbnails and video playback will fail through the proxy.
StrictNodes 1 forces Tor to only use the listed countries – it will stall rather than fall backFeishin really does a good job with auto DJ, its not perfect but it beats the hell out of using corpo streaming services.
I think NaviDrome is whats actually doing the work, unfortunately Jellyfin doesn’t do nearly as good a job.
I got a theory, but you’re not gonna like it.
I take a lot of guff for openly saying that I think most people are dumb. Whenever you say this, someone inevitably pops up and says “50% of people are below average by definition.”
While that’s not really how it works, it also dodges something I’m starting to think we need to admit:
In this modern world, totally average human intelligence is actually kinda goddamn stupid.
The more complex the civilization, the more intelligence is required to navigate it.
By “intelligence” I mean:
This was not always the case.
Up until relatively recently, you didn’t need to know much to be perfectly happy and functional. If you were born to a farmer’s family, you learned everything you needed from helping the old man and old lady around the farm. When they got too old or sick, you took the reins, prospered, had a family, and taught your kids the same way. You had a place in the order of things. Nobody asked you to answer hard questions or shape the destinies of strangers.
In the West, that changed in the eighteenth century when we invented modern democracy (not the ancient Greek version—don’t be tedious).
Suddenly people were expected to understand complex systems involving people nothing like them doing things they knew nothing about—but those things still mattered.
A Bavarian woodsman had no clue how the fishing industry worked, nor did he need to. That didn’t make him an ignoramus; it just wasn’t his world.
But now you were asked—allowed, even—to vote on what society did. Considered progress, sure. But it also placed a new burden on the proletariat: responsibility for anything beyond feeding their family and paying taxes to whatever inbred idiot made the decisions.
At the same time, we shifted from feudal agrarian → mercantile → industrial → post-industrial. All new, all fast-changing.
For millennia the amount of genuinely new information needed in a lifetime was near zero. Maybe one big idea per generation.
Suddenly entire industries were replaced every couple generations… then every couple decades… now every couple months.
Why? Because information became the currency, and information is defined by novelty (thanks, Claude Shannon).
Being skilled no longer meant apprentice → journeyman → master. It meant keeping up with relentless change and innovation. Civilization rewarded those who could—and left everyone else behind.
When you look at Americans who make the dumbest political decisions (aside from bigotry and religious fanaticism), the #1 reason is: they don’t want to learn things.
Every election, politicians pander to dying industries: coal, oil, old-school manufacturing. The workers are proud their parents did the same job… and apparently can’t grasp that the world has changed so much since their parents bought a house at 25 with overtime at the plant that they might as well have time-traveled here.
They complain about being left behind, but they ignored roughly everyone warning them to adapt. You can’t keep voting for people who only benefit capitalists and still expect solid ground under working-class boots. You can’t demand cheap goods while removing every limit on what capitalists can do.
Yes, it’s complex. It requires reading and critical thinking.
But for nearly twenty years everyone has had instant, free access to all the information all the time.
And here’s the counter: “People don’t know how to access it, process it, contextualize it, or think critically.”
Exactly. That’s my entire fucking point.
Our civilization has hit an inflection point where merely average intelligence is no longer enough to understand how almost anything works.
People still grasp what their great-grandparents did: their job, their hobbies, their local community, whatever mass media is trending. Not much else.
That’s simply not enough anymore to make informed decisions or even hold informed opinions.
Yet this is precisely when social media encourages everyone to not only have but share uninformed opinions—and expect to be heard, respected, taken seriously. Not because it’s wise, but because engagement makes rich people richer.
People are simultaneously told it’s their right and duty to participate in democracy regardless of preparation. That idea collapses the second you think about it—unless you see it as a well-meaning attempt to fix historic discrimination against minorities who were barred from education and voice.
But at some point: do we really want to encourage participation from people who don’t know how anything works—when one dumb vote in Nowheresville can rain bombs, starvation, or ecosystem collapse halfway around the planet?
I’m not saying ditch democracy. It’s still better than autocracy.
But maybe it’s time to revisit the idea that you should at least understand what kind of government you have before voting on what it does.
Literacy tests were white-supremacist garbage in the 19th century when Black people were deliberately kept uneducated. That’s not today’s world. We could design gatekeeping that doesn’t discriminate on race or class.
Or we can stay committed to absolute freedom with zero responsibility: that people too unintelligent to understand society should not only be heard but allowed to dictate taxes, policy, and killing done in our names.
Maybe that really is an inalienable right.
But look around.
If enough people are so easily confounded by modern life that they elect a mentally unsound psychopathic con-man game-show host as emperor—and the system is so broken it allows this, allows him to run amok, and singlehandedly torches America’s stability and global standing—
maybe we’ve spent way too much time talking about freedom and way too little about responsibility.
Can we really keep a functioning society on vibes only?
i am disconcerted by how many techies who saw through crypto *immediately* have fallen for AI krokodil
Congrats to @pluralistic for coining the word #enshitification [☜ this is my mistaken misspelling] (See footnotes 2 and 3) — as something that is named is more easily discussed, weighed, and planned about than a concept that exists only as vague concern. And the government of #Norway has thoughts and words on it and thinks they can help make it stop. 100 page PDF
Correction: The preferred spelling is #enshittification https://www.merriam-webster.com/slang/enshittification
If banks and governments insist on checking devices for security they should define actual standards. It should be possible for any tiny project to be certified at no cost and the standards should be fairly enforced so a mainstream device without current patches is disallowed.
International Women’s Day: The cis women who are fiercely fighting transphobia
https://www.thepinknews.com/2026/03/08/international-womens-day-trans/
"Images verified by Human Rights Watch show Israel fired white phosphorus in populated areas of southern Lebanon."
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/9/israel-unlawfully-used-white-phosphorus-in-lebanon-hrw
@bruce @tillybridges @YKantRachelRead
The period before the rise of Hitler was really interesting.
The punitive allied reperations for WW1 really destroyed the economy.
Communist armed rebellions were common, I could be wrong about the cities, but Berlin was totally Governed by a Communist Government for 2 weeks before Army defeated them. They were waiting for russia help, I think Hamburg was communist for a week.
When Nazis took power, they used 'socialist' in their name because of its popularity.
@mttaggart @maxleibman Yeah the framing from 404 was pretty bad, this is an issue with how payment methods in general work, Proton does accept crypto and anyone can buy pre-paid gift cards with cash to use to pay for services like that, this should be a teachable moment about those things rather then an attack on proton.
It’s mostly the users fault for not taking better care about their opsec given the work they do, but I do think proton constantly advertising them selves as more “private” then they really are leads to people making assumptions that they would be protected in some way against state level actions or court orders. It’s foolish to expect ANY for profit corporation to stand up for you on principles, sure they might have great policies and PR, but at the end of the day no one is gonna risk jail or fines by a court, or do what Lavabit did back in the day…
Remember Lavabit? now that was a company that absolutely respected privacy above all… and we see where it got them.
Listen,
It is possible to criticize something without abjectly despising it. 404 can have bad takes; I'm still paying for their journalism because it's usually very good.
Proton's marketing and social team are kind of yutzes, but the service is very good for what it is, and much better than the normative choice.
Seeking infallibility will eat all your time and get you nowhere.
this feels very computer illiterate of me, but what's up w meshtastic??
it looks interesting and I'm v intrigued by the idea of a decentralized network, and the versatility of it, but I'm not totally convinced. with the amt of posts and videos ive seen abt it here and elsewhere, and by the very nature of decentralized systems, it requires a lot of users, and so it's hard to feel like this isn't all some marketing tactic for a new and interesting but ultimately niche and unhelpful gadget.
does anyone here have any experience using meshtastic stuff to improve the community around them? I want to believe but I don't want another gadget collecting dust 😅
@femmepraytell I discovered Meshtastic a little over a year ago and got setup with some radios and gadgets to use with it, convinced a few friends to also check it out. Its really neat but not all too practical compared to some other standards that use the same tech. Meshcore uses the same LoRa devices but is built in a way that allows for much larger reach and works more efficiently in general (not to say its “better” then meshtastic, but its more practical at the moment)
Here in the pacific north west we have regular comms on meshcore across all of oregon and a good part of washington consistantly, with seattle and even futher away to BC, Canada coming in too on a good day.
As to the improving the community part: Its useful during protests and for operations where you need comms but wouldn’t want to use a cell phone or have access to wifi. There’s a #Icewatch channel that gets used occasionally to report on activity locally, another benefit being that there is no way to censor or shut down a meshcore (or meshtastic) channel in the way they could with something like a discord or website.
It’s perhaps still niche at the moment, but the potential is pretty huge. The gadgets are also incredibly versatile, if meshcore or meshtastic dont end up being your jam, there is also chatterbox, and reticulum.
404 Media reports that Swiss authorities turned over some identifying info about a user of an account associated with Defend the Forest/Stop Cop City. This video is a brief summary. (Note: there is no defend the forest "group" as this video suggests.)
@defendatlforest pretty huge opsec fail to not pay with crypto, I get that a group with a name like “defend the forest” might not be that into crypto-currency, but this is like the one “legitimate” use case for such a thing, or pay with cash in the mail which is an option a some like mullvad offer.
I accidentally launched Nautilus as a file manager and almost vomited, how tf do people use gnome… Gross.
It has a not all too different vibe from the “fisher price” style of windows xp, not quite as clownish but still pretty bad… like wtf is this a PC or a phablet?
I’m sure it works great for some people, I’m just surprised its still sorta kinda the default, in as much as anything can be a “default option” on linux.
Maybe it looks less bad when its all together and you know how to use it, i’d imagine my system would probably feel pretty terrible to most anyone but me so to each their own of course.
I decided to record mew’s purring while he was laying on me a couple weeks ago, I didn’t know it at the time but it was the last time I’d hear him purring so strongly and happily. I’m glad i decided to record it.
It was hard to lose him so quickly after the diagnosis, but It was also nice to be able to plan for it.
@dps910 @hobbs Today was the first I heard of it, I can imagine there is a large overlab between “people who want to call out others behavior” and “people who create drama” (and GOS does seem to have its share of drama)
Looking at the actual conversation and user, they do seem to be concern trolling, and it does read like an LLM, so they aren’t wrong to be calling it out, just silly to use a rather generic hashtag instead of something like #concerntroll