No idea, all I see as options now for Paypal and credit card.
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hansolo@lemmy.todayto World News@lemmy.world•China is Systematically Dismantling Tibetan Monastic TraditionsEnglish21·8 hours agoA judgment that forces the reader to think perhaps you were the one who was hurt.
hansolo@lemmy.todayto Technology@lemmy.world•WhatsApp is officially getting adsEnglish363·11 hours agoOnly if you donate. Otherwise bad news, Signal.
hansolo@lemmy.todayto Technology@lemmy.world•29% of adults couldn't go hour without internet - surveyEnglish2·11 hours agoWas this part of a survey where they get the “survey says” answers on Family Feud?
If this was me, and I used to just keep a notebook of the wines I liked, there’s a couple ways to go about this.
Edit: in the Fdroid store theres an app named Cavity (terrible name) or Wine cellar that might be what you want for your own wine tracking.
Info on new wines is simply not going to come for free (or “free”) bundled in an app unless you make it yourself. But wines you try is a much easier thing to track. If you can just accept they need to be 2 different things, it an easier task.
IMO, what you want is to create and self host a survey that let’s you easily and quickly enter year, location, attributes, photo of the label, notes, etc. Depending on how granular you get with flavors and tasting attributes, you could get in a groove and log a wine with dizzy thumbs and low light in a minute or two. Then you just decide where that data lives, and how to get it back into a spreadsheet or SQL db to search it.
You could do most of this in a Google form/sheet, though you’ll simply get nagged and tracked later in more subtle ways.
I’ll be real honest, I suggest you ask ChatGPT on options, and suggest things like you want to build a survey in HTML (it’ll do this for you) that lives on a device and is bookmarked for easy access, sends data to, let’s say a Dropbox file you access with an API, and you use another HTML page you save locally to search.
For real, let us know how it goes, because I would all get some use from this.
hansolo@lemmy.todayto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Privacy DNS provider (eg Njalla) with ProtonMail/SimpleLogin4·1 day agoWhat do they mean by “neighborhood”? The domain? Or the top level .LA?
Is your email something like [email protected]?
Seems harsh, but it’s hard to unblock a subdomain while blocking the rest of a domain.
Formally, it’s the Alliance to Restore the Republic. Mon Mothma is the Alliance’s Chancellor, which is a sort of association of rebel cells spread across the galaxy. So she’s sort of elected by the leadership of each rebel cell.
Then on the starship side, it basically seems like anyone with a ship gets promoted to general and promised back pay once the Republic is restored. It’s sort of a gamble, but it beats smuggling spice and contraband.
hansolo@lemmy.todayto Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•"Sad thing to be, nonsensical thing to want to be" 💔🥀💔🥀244·2 days agoIt’s toned down since 23andMe was new, but I absolutely know people that will regularly call themselves by whatever European group they think gives them character.
I always ask if they have an EU passport.
2018-2019 is when they officially turned the corner and decided to focus only on ad revenue. But the SEO abuse dove it into the ground by 2014ish. They were making money enough to expand by orders of magnitude into other areas, so they simply didn’t want to tweak their search or strategy and kill their golden goose that funded things like Good Drive and their shit social network and loon, etc.
hansolo@lemmy.todayto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Meta could track your browser sessions even in incognito and link them with your real identity15·2 days agoLet’s say you use a VPN, and all your internet traffic comes from an IP in London. 178.238.10.1.
It doesn’t matter if you have a VPN, if you log in to anything with any account tied to your real name ([email protected]), your email and anything done on that London IP are all linked. Google builds a profile on you based on the activity on that IP. AND your browser profile. Private/incognito window or not, if there’s a Google tracker on the site, they connect it all. Google doesn’t care about private windows. If you go to reddit in a private window on the same IP as your gmail, Google sees that and tracks every page you look at.
So let’s say that you log into your email from work. Google now has a treasure trove of new info about you and people you know. Same for FB, who uses the fact that you and someone else were logged on from the same IP range to suggest new friends.
Let’s pretend that you live in China and still have access to a VPN and want to learn about the Tienanmen Square Massacre. But the government can ask Google about you. What do you need?
- an IP never ever used with an account associated with an account with your real name.
- a no-log VPN that won’t tattle on you if asked what sites did you access on a specific date.
- a browser fingerprint never ever associated with an account tied to your real name.
hansolo@lemmy.todayto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Meta could track your browser sessions even in incognito and link them with your real identity36·2 days agoSince January Google has been using browser fingerprinting and IP triangulation to track across incognito windows.
Meta wants in the game as well. Nothing done on a phone with Meta apps is done in isolation.
Edit: seems like only vanilla mobile browsers affected. Brave was not vulnerable, DDG minimally so, and I expect Iron/Waterfox with uBlock would also not have allowed tracking.
https://securityonline.info/androids-secret-tracking-meta-yandex-abused-localhost-for-user-data/
hansolo@lemmy.todayto Privacy@lemmy.ml•What extensions would you absolutely recommend to someone who use Firefox?2·2 days agoNo, you use one as the backup. That’s why I said use JShelter, but if a site breaks beyond use, switch IPs and then reload with NoScript instead to be more selective of what is blocked and what’s not. That way I can still block Cloudflare and Google and Apple and still let the actual site load. And JScreep seems (for me, YMMV) to treat each as distinct fingerprints.
IMO if you know you can have multiple fingerprint profiles anyway based on which combo of extensions you use that do roughly the same job, that’s a net benefit.
hansolo@lemmy.todayto Privacy@lemmy.ml•What extensions would you absolutely recommend to someone who use Firefox?9·3 days agoThe why is browser fingerprinting. Which Google started using as of January to track everyone.
https://abrahamjuliot.github.io/creepjs/
So if you go to ANY page with Google trackers, even in private mode, Google knows.
hansolo@lemmy.todayto Privacy@lemmy.ml•What extensions would you absolutely recommend to someone who use Firefox?5·3 days agoFor vanilla FF I use multi - account containers, uBlock, and privacy badger.
For other FF forks like Librewolf, I get more blocky, like JShelter, a random agent switcher, and if that breaks a site beyond use I try Chameleon and NoScirpt.
hansolo@lemmy.todayto Technology@lemmy.world•Half of companies planning to replace customer service with AI are reversing courseEnglish21·3 days agoIt is, but it’s a use case that has a shitload of money behind it.
Do you know why we have had reliable e-commerce since 1999? Porn websites. That was the use case that pushed credit card acceptance online.
The demand is so huge that firms would rather stumble a bit at first to save huge amounts for a bad but barely sub-par UX.
hansolo@lemmy.todayto News@lemmy.world•An Omaha food plant owner says he followed the rules for hiring immigrants. It was raided anyway.1·4 days agoNot all states. Fewer do this than don’t, IIRC.
hansolo@lemmy.todayto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Do you ever use words from different countries?2·4 days agoDepends on the person. My spouse and I, along with 5 or 6 friends, use a variety of key words from a couple shared languages to talk about things when we don’t want other to understand. Mostly haggling or talking about sales stuff to discuss if we like something or think it’s too expensive when a human is hovering right there. So I can give body language of disappointment while saying “this is great.”
hansolo@lemmy.todayto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Is there info on how rich people protect their privacy? (I assume they do care about their privacy, right?)13·4 days agoThis 100%.
Wealthy people essentially pay staff to do make things happen for them, and those staff don’t sign up for IG or FB stressing abou making sure to use their ONE email like [email protected] for everything.
PA staff are both IT staff and human password managers, creating and curating massive sets of logins that are functionally disposable. With enough clout and money, if you DO have a problem with a social media platform, or your phone number, a PA calls an Executive CSR and sorts out the problem.
So it’s that their “privacy” is masked by the haphazard way they interact with things that track them. For them, tracking them is security to ensure you know who they are so that have a frictionless experience. If they want a dummy account to creep on people or be a perv, they get that easily, too.
I don’t hate Arch. Or Vegan diets. Or Crossfit. Or colleges outside of Boston, either.
But the people…well…
Yes, but so are the ads!