(2024-08-19) It's all about ownership ------------------------------------- There is a huge problem no one can be silent about anymore. A huge question that you need to ask yourself whenever you consider buying anything, or even receiving it as a gift or something: "Will I own it once I get it?" The scale of this problem is much larger than you think. And I'm not even talking about legal restrictions (let's be honest, no one fully cares about them), I'm talking about real dystopian stuff. I'm talking about every time some game or software switches to a subscription model (including the firmware of frigging cars that people already have paid a ton of money for), every time a hardware crypto key breaks, every time you rely upon streaming services instead of downloading everything locally and self-hosting it whenever required, and then suddenly find out that the content you got used to is no longer there and you can do absolutely nothing about it. For instance, I keep seeing cryptobros actively advertising "hardware wallets" like Tangem or Ledger. Who is to guarantee that the master keys never leave the device or weren't backed up by the manufacturer even before putting them inside? How do you restore your wallet keys if the device breaks? If you choose the recovery passphrase option, how does it differ from you just memorizing the BIP passphrase and using it to restore the keys with any other wallet, without introducing this extra point of failure? Lastly, whatever happened to "paper wallets" where you just print out your keypairs as QR codes and hex values and store them in a secure place? This kind of plague didn't appear overnight. Since mid-2000s, we've been slowly but surely fed the worst Orwellian practices disguised as technological progress. All "for our own convenience", of course. It's just that now the amount of things we have to pay for but still don't own becomes so apparent that it can't be ignored anymore. The most important part of it is that such things were considered a novelty and out of place back then, but are so commonplace now that the general public already can't imagine otherwise, and readily and mindlessly considers anyone who prefers to actually download stuff "a pirate", "a dork" or "a geek" at best. This is how scarily efficiently Overton window sliding works nowadays. So, what can be done about this? Plenty, actually. Increase your local long-term storage capacity. Archive your software and data. Go Linux and BSD way. Go FOSS-first regardless of the platform. Collect game ROMs and support emulation. Download books, music and movies. Learn how to liberate the firmware of whatever proprietary electronics you have to use. Combat planned obsolescence. DIY wherever you can. Learn analogue skills (mech watch regulation, slide rule usage, Sun/star navigation etc). Resist corporate normie propaganda and keep your mind clear of online noise. They may have won the battle, but not the war. --- Luxferre ---