Repost from https://todon.eu/@marcohackney/115992340469511552 with ALT text added.
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Repost from https://todon.eu/@marcohackney/115992340469511552 with ALT text added. Unified chargers, free roaming, travel, study and work everywhere in the EU, simple bank transfers with SEPA and Wero. EU makes life better.
In theory, you can "work and study with the same rights" within the EU as an EU-citizen.
The reality is unfortunately far from that theory. One has to be very white, blonde and privileged to be spared xenophobia and discrimination, and very blind not to see it.
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Repost from https://todon.eu/@marcohackney/115992340469511552 with ALT text added. Unified chargers, free roaming, travel, study and work everywhere in the EU, simple bank transfers with SEPA and Wero. EU makes life better.
@jwildeboer Yeah but, but… North America is much better at separating consumers from their money!
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Repost from https://todon.eu/@marcohackney/115992340469511552 with ALT text added. Unified chargers, free roaming, travel, study and work everywhere in the EU, simple bank transfers with SEPA and Wero. EU makes life better.
@jwildeboer Yes, the EU tries to outlaw strong encryption.
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Repost from https://todon.eu/@marcohackney/115992340469511552 with ALT text added. Unified chargers, free roaming, travel, study and work everywhere in the EU, simple bank transfers with SEPA and Wero. EU makes life better.
Actual trickle down is when the EU makes a good regulation, and it ends up de-facto regulation in the US because manufacturers want to sell the same products across markets.
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Repost from https://todon.eu/@marcohackney/115992340469511552 with ALT text added. Unified chargers, free roaming, travel, study and work everywhere in the EU, simple bank transfers with SEPA and Wero. EU makes life better.
@jwildeboer in an on-topic reply, I was rather taken aback by the USB-C regulation. They claimed that it would reduce waste, but in reality all the cheap chinese outlets are just making shitty USB-C cables instead of other shitty cables.
A far more effective solution would have been to start setting minimum standards for each class of cable, including throughput, SNR, and expected longevity. Then, to enforce those standards, require a license obtained via a test certificate from an approved testing facility within the EU. No license? Big fine, amounting to at least 140% of the revenue generated from unlicensed sales. Amazon would have to shell out millions in such a case.
And the licensing would have to be carried out at the retailers expense, which means the testing facilities would generate jobs and taxable income within the EU. Plus, auch a regulation wouldn't stymie innovation and new cable/connector specs.
Instead, we got a poorly thought-out solution that will lock us in to a standard that will eventually no longer be suitable or fit for purpose. Grumble.
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but the EU:
- is intransparent and complex
- is slow to move when it matters the most
- is a supranational entity that can overrule local legislature
- is in many regards a dubious democracy
- did not hold its promise of no more wars on its soil
- has frontex
- is a neoliberal economic bloc
- drives a parliament around between belgium and france for no other reason than pettiness and costs laughably high amounts in the process- a lot of what humans do ends up complex. It is unfortunate but we have to live with it.
- slow is usually good in politics.
- that is federalism
- define dubious in this context.
- there have been no wars on EU soil.
- yep. and frontex is not what you think it is.
- it isn't.
- that is a detail. Compromises are needed to keep everyone happy sometimes. See the first item. But yes, everything should be in Strasbourg. -
(It took less than an hour for the first "Yes, but" folks to show up and accuse me of being ignorant of the EU border policies and how we drown refugees in the mediterranean. Thank you for giving me that short moment of peace. Everything I have done and do for refugees is irrelevant to you because you just want to make your point. So. Welcome to my blocklist.)
@jwildeboer you are surprised you get "yes/but" answers to a "yes/but" post 🙂
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@xavez @jwildeboer Are you complaining about the regulation or the enforcement of the regulation?
Where in the regulation does it say ”you have to show annoying buttons to all your users and try to trick them into pressing the wrong button”?
@ahltorp @jwildeboer the regulation.
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undefined oblomov@sociale.network shared this topic
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- a lot of what humans do ends up complex. It is unfortunate but we have to live with it.
- slow is usually good in politics.
- that is federalism
- define dubious in this context.
- there have been no wars on EU soil.
- yep. and frontex is not what you think it is.
- it isn't.
- that is a detail. Compromises are needed to keep everyone happy sometimes. See the first item. But yes, everything should be in Strasbourg.@krist @mfru @jwildeboer What is Frontex then? There seems to be a lot of chatter and condemnation of Chat Control, but yet I've yet to hear anyone condemn mass surveillance done through Frontex outside of EU borders.
> Thanks to funding by EU taxpayers, Senegal has built at least nine border posts and four regional DNLT branches since 2018, supplied with invasive surveillance technologies that, besides the black briefcase, include biometric fingerprinting and facial recognition software, drones, digital servers, night-vision goggles and more.
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Repost from https://todon.eu/@marcohackney/115992340469511552 with ALT text added. Unified chargers, free roaming, travel, study and work everywhere in the EU, simple bank transfers with SEPA and Wero. EU makes life better.
@jwildeboer Thank you, EU! As a Romanian, I felt great treated as a second class citizen when Austria, Netherlands, and Sweden dangled Schengen membership over the heads of Romania and Bulgaria in exchange for better logging deals for Holzindustrie Schweighofer and expedited approval of the Neptun Deep Black Sea drilling. I guess "Green New Deal", but we want IKEA to continue to illegally cut down old growth forests in the Carpathians, because... growth.
Also thanks EU, for letting Western Europe ship their trash to Romania, in order to avoid environmental fines back home, and 🌳 be 🌳 green 🌳, rather than investing in better waste infrastructure.
But hey, we have USB-C now, fuck the Balkans.
EDIT: obviously, the EU is not the sole party at fault here, there are plenty of corrupt Balkan politicians that would sell their mother for a couple grand, but let's not pretend the EU is the savior of Europe.
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Maybe I should just leave all of this "social" network stuff to those that want to destroy any positive moments and retreat. (I won't. I pity those that seem to be so filled with negativity that there is nothing positive they can ever add here. I will continue to try and hope my mental health won't suffer too much.)
@jwildeboer
Yes, continue, please.
And: Thank you! -
Maybe I should just leave all of this "social" network stuff to those that want to destroy any positive moments and retreat. (I won't. I pity those that seem to be so filled with negativity that there is nothing positive they can ever add here. I will continue to try and hope my mental health won't suffer too much.)
@jwildeboer please don't. I really enjoy reading you
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No matter what you think is more important — please do remember that I am a human being, not a machine. That I post here to share a message, not an invitation to you to accuse or attack me. Treat me with the respect I try to give you with every post and we can all have good discussions, even on tough topics. Deal?
I really tried to stay friendly and welcoming. I asked for the people that reply to have a bit of respect and to not use my post as a soapbox to stand on to spread negativity. But still, replies have been added on Frontex, the EU being racist and so on. Lesson learned: Some loud people just MUST be negative and project their negativity on me whenever I say something slightly positive. Those will all be blocked by me. My timeline, my decision, my freedom. Have a wonderful day!
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@jwildeboer you are surprised you get "yes/but" answers to a "yes/but" post 🙂
@krist Friendly replies are more than welcome. Sarcasm is also absolutely fine. But accusations of ignorance from my side, of racism and replies that only spout negativity are not.
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I really tried to stay friendly and welcoming. I asked for the people that reply to have a bit of respect and to not use my post as a soapbox to stand on to spread negativity. But still, replies have been added on Frontex, the EU being racist and so on. Lesson learned: Some loud people just MUST be negative and project their negativity on me whenever I say something slightly positive. Those will all be blocked by me. My timeline, my decision, my freedom. Have a wonderful day!
@jwildeboer
👍 Well done! -
@jwildeboer you can’t possibly know but I understand all of that better than you might think.
It’s the implementation that’s the mess. Leaving this to millions of websites was a bad idea. It should have always been a browser preference. One exists and could have been adapted.
@xavez @jwildeboer the cookies are a mess. No cookies, no banners. Dont blame the messenger.
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@jwildeboer on top of that there really are legitimate benign reasons to track user behaviour and make improvements to websites and applications, that do require some form of cookies or persistent storage on the user’s device.
It’s too easy to wave the data brokers and tracking flag, because the cynical truth is that you don’t even need cookies to do that part.
@xavez @jwildeboer there are NEVER good reasons to track users. Users do a favor to you by visiting your website, reapect your visitors. IRL cookies would be extremely cringe. Can you imagine being tagged with a sticker every time you enter a store, to be checked again when you exit the store or enter another one?
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You seem to complain about both the glass being half full and the glass being half empty.
As difficult as it is for a 27 member bloc (now including a couple of bad faith actors) to operate on the basis of unanimity, we are way better off with the EU in place. It's amazing how far something that started as an economic agreement among a handful of countries has gotten.
I hope there'll be a day when it'll be possible to reform the treaties to adapt them to the times.
@skandalfo Changing the treaties is hard work (for good reasons). But it has been done several times. Lisboa, Maastricht and we will see more changes. The EU is a living organism. It moves slowly for reasons. But it moves. And when under pressure, it can also act fast. It's up to all of us to make it better. @mfru
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(It took less than an hour for the first "Yes, but" folks to show up and accuse me of being ignorant of the EU border policies and how we drown refugees in the mediterranean. Thank you for giving me that short moment of peace. Everything I have done and do for refugees is irrelevant to you because you just want to make your point. So. Welcome to my blocklist.)
@jwildeboer tankies.
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@ahltorp @jwildeboer the regulation.
@xavez @ahltorp @jwildeboer good for you