@supervent @nn4x This goodness, absolutely this.
Why is anyone still using the #clearnet for this?
#I2P is absolutely one of the better options.
@supervent @nn4x This goodness, absolutely this.
Why is anyone still using the #clearnet for this?
#I2P is absolutely one of the better options.
@nyl Personally, I'd be going *out of my way* to disable information-leaking features like that.
#Proprietary suggestion & AI engine? No thanks.
@[email protected] @[email protected] From the article it seems more of a #Qt win for now (though it does mention patches for many others), but in any case that's neat.
Now it all just needs sane ways to interface from #CommonLisp.
@Salty @sailor_sega_saturn @TinyTimmyTokyo Right up until the secret gets liberated and one gets buried in concrete for trying to hide it, anyway.
No guarantees of any utopia anyway though.
@sailor_sega_saturn @TinyTimmyTokyo Eh, no guarantee (or any reason to believe really) a simulation would be even focused in any way on humanity (no anthropocentrism needed).
Similarly for superintelligence, few reasons for it to care.
Cryogenics is a better bet and as you say it's quite unlikely unfortunately.
@ad_on_is The problem you're hitting is that the #clearnet / #Internet in general weren't adequately designed to handle malicious #infrastructure operators.
"The 'net interprets censorship as damage and routes around it" was a comment about #Usenet, a #federated / #P2P system with gossiped (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gossip_protocol) message exchange which wasn't particularly picky about its transport layer (indeed you could load a spool on a floppy and mail it), not the internet.