kraniax

joined 1 year ago
[–] kraniax@lemmy.wtf 2 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (1 children)

To the folks who posted useless comments instead of actually helping: Thanks for nothing.

I don't know what you expected. There's no need to be rude. Installing a Flatpak for example is a very valid answer and would definitely solve the problem.

And initially you didn't even say how did you install brave, which is quite relevant in order to find a solution.

Edit: You put the error in a screenshot which leaves it rather useless for searching the error in the web. In general, I'd say that you have very little error solving skills and instead of thanking for "nothing" you should be thankful that people even bothered to answer.

[–] kraniax@lemmy.wtf 1 points 11 months ago

yes, but you missed an essential step of the process: apt handles dependencies for you. maybe not in this case, but installing .debs directly requires installing dependencies manually and it's not uncommon for people to forget about this and then saying that the program does not work.

installing from an apt repo is always better as long as the repo is trusted (and it should be if you're installing .debs from it anyway) because it handles dependencies and updates automatically. If you just install the .deb, you'll have to repeat the process per each update.

[–] kraniax@lemmy.wtf 6 points 1 year ago (1 children)

But the comments where not removed by mods. It seems like the commenter removed them.

[–] kraniax@lemmy.wtf 2 points 1 year ago (3 children)

I think OP has been the insufferable one.

[–] kraniax@lemmy.wtf 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Brave is known to take privacy (and security) more seriously than its contenders. It's therefore unsurprising to find it recommended by Privacy Guides.

At least in the privacy community, Brave isn’t super popular. It feels more geared towards the "hyped crypto early adopters". Brave inclusion in privacy guides has always been controversial.

Brave is ultimately an advertising company, they base their business model in ads. And everyone knows how bad that can turn.

Ungoogled Chromium on the other hand takes patches from brave and other Chromium based browsers, removing every bit of telemetry and giving you the cleanest experience you can get on Chromium, without relying on a shady company.

[–] kraniax@lemmy.wtf 2 points 1 year ago

have you looked at the community? this is c/privacy and they recommended blogger lol

[–] kraniax@lemmy.wtf 3 points 1 year ago

I don't know who Rossmann is, I'm talking about the video format, which is the worst way of consuming content. It's super slow, you can't possibly skip just by reading some headings around, and it's just far more inefficient than plain text. You can't possibly archive it without wasting megabytes of storage either.

[–] kraniax@lemmy.wtf 4 points 1 year ago

I didn't mean this specific one. I don't know anything about Skiff other than this post is a sketchy camouflaged ad for them.

If they supported IMAP maybe I would look further, but that's my very first requisite that they didn't meet.

[–] kraniax@lemmy.wtf 6 points 1 year ago (2 children)

the day I don't find a provider with IMAP support is the day I'll leave email for good. You won't force me to use your absurdly bloated and full of telemetry web clients or your incompatible encryption.

OpenPGP + NeoMutt has been my email workflow for 10 years now.

[–] kraniax@lemmy.wtf 18 points 1 year ago (10 children)
[–] kraniax@lemmy.wtf 33 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

sure, a company that has used petabytes of data they do not own any rights of to train their models are totally excluding their own customers data when turning a switch off.

yeah, I totally trust OpenAI and Microsoft with my data. It's not like Microsoft is spying on me after turning of Windows telemetry either.

[–] kraniax@lemmy.wtf 3 points 1 year ago

DE independent but it requires GTK4 and libadwaita. Maybe just call it a GTK GUI for Bluetooth?

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