COMPUTER AMERICA; ALL LINUX SHOW: Disobedience, Privacy, and Doing
Computer America - En podkast av Ben Crossman
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IntroductionBefore we get started, you should really follow my YouTube channel, my personal Websites, and if you are curious, my Flipboard magazines where you can follow the things that catch my attention.Subscribe to Marcel’s YouTube channel where you can view the latest editions of the Cooking With Linux show.https://www.youtube.com/user/freethinkeratlarge/ You might also want to support Marcel’s video habits on Patreon.https://patreon.com/marcelgagne “Cooking With Linux” on Flipboard https://flipboard.com/@wftl/cooking-with-linux-oun4gv1ly My own site is http://marcelgagne.com where I talk about whatever comes into my head, including Linux and Open Source software. If you just want the Linux and Open Source stuff, head over to http://cookingwithlinux.com .Today’s WineToday, we travel to Spain for our feature wine. It’s a 2018 Verdejo Sauvignon Blanc by Toro Bravo, of La Mancha, Spain. The Verdejo accounts for 70% of the grapes with the remaining 30% going to the Sauvignon Blanc grapes. This is a lovely crisp, straw colored white, with pear overtones coupled with a lemony zest. There’s also a hint of mustard that follows in behind, giving this wine a great deal more character than you’d expect in a $7 bottle of wine (Canadian prices). Honestly, there’s no way a wine this cheap should taste so good, but it does. Enjoy!News. Rumors. Conspiracy TheoriesThe EU has officially adopted Signal for its instant messaging because “privacy”https://www.theverge.com/2020/2/24/21150918/european-commission-signal-encrypted-messaging Open Source sustainability called into questionhttps://www.techrepublic.com/article/new-study-throws-the-open-source-sustainability-debate-into-question/Latest episode of TIC TEK TOE drops at #011https://tic-tek-toe.com/2020/02/14/not-that-virus-restaurants-stupid-government-oversight-star-trek-picard-bad-science-and-alcohol/ Today’s Featured TopicLinux, Open Source, and Civil DisobedienceI’ve been doing a lot of thinking lately about the Open Source community and its willingness to flout local and international laws, sometimes for very good reasons. For example, think back, if you can, to “libdvdcss,” a library that allowed Linux users to play encrypted DVDs on their computers, even though that could bring a felony charge in the United States. Consider that users had movies on DVD that they bought and paid for, and they wanted to play them on a DVD player they had bought and paid for, using a computer they had bought a paid for. Despite following all the rules and legally paying for every hardware piece along the chain, Linux users were barred because the code necessary to allow that to play their legal content was barred to them.So they broke the encryption, thereby breaking the law, the infamous Digital Millennium Copyright Act, or DMCA. The whole thing was obviously unfair, at least to those of us in the Linux community, so it seemed like a good reason to ignore the law. This law, remember, carried a felony charge.Open Source VR WorldsI’ve been spending a lot of time in...