By the way, I am now officially tied to a device which is too old to support Anubis.
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@sneexy Until the Pixel 7 arrives somewhere between 18th and 23rd of this month, I am stuck with:
- Moto C Plus (32bit, armv6, Android 7, modded)
- ZTE Blade A34 (64bit, armv7?, Android 13, stock, cannot unlock) -
@alexia@shrimp.starlightnet.work @carbonatedcaffeine@social.treehouse.systems I'm going to be trying my best to keep my current PC for that long, previous PC held strong for almost 7 years before I managed to earn some funds for a new one in 2021. Old hardware is still sitting here ofc, ready to serve as a retro machine or backup PC if needed (although I also have a steamdeck now)
@mitsunee @alexia @carbonatedcaffeine It's much easier to do that with PCs than with phones, since they're more repairable, don't require a battery, will run upstream kernels and so can be kept up to date without support from the vendor, and are generally more powerful than phones. I still regularly use a laptop from 2008 and it's perfectly usable, but a phone from that period would be almost unusable (especially without a new battery) and might not even be able to connect to the mobile network in some countries. -
@mitsunee @alexia @carbonatedcaffeine It's much easier to do that with PCs than with phones, since they're more repairable, don't require a battery, will run upstream kernels and so can be kept up to date without support from the vendor, and are generally more powerful than phones. I still regularly use a laptop from 2008 and it's perfectly usable, but a phone from that period would be almost unusable (especially without a new battery) and might not even be able to connect to the mobile network in some countries.
@noisytoot@berkeley.edu.pl @alexia@shrimp.starlightnet.work @carbonatedcaffeine@social.treehouse.systems yeah I honestly have no clue what I'll do if my current phone dies or stops getting updates entirely. There isn't a single manufacturer I trust with keeping up-to-date with security patches for longer than the first one to three years of a device's lifespan and I honestly don't even have the money to replace it currently
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@mitsunee @alexia @carbonatedcaffeine It's much easier to do that with PCs than with phones, since they're more repairable, don't require a battery, will run upstream kernels and so can be kept up to date without support from the vendor, and are generally more powerful than phones. I still regularly use a laptop from 2008 and it's perfectly usable, but a phone from that period would be almost unusable (especially without a new battery) and might not even be able to connect to the mobile network in some countries.@noisytoot @mitsunee @carbonatedcaffeine
fun fact: one of the two devices (the ZTE) that I'm currently on until the used order arrives has a Unisoc SoC that is apparently supported by mainline linux :3 -
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@noisytoot@berkeley.edu.pl @alexia@shrimp.starlightnet.work @carbonatedcaffeine@social.treehouse.systems yeah I honestly have no clue what I'll do if my current phone dies or stops getting updates entirely. There isn't a single manufacturer I trust with keeping up-to-date with security patches for longer than the first one to three years of a device's lifespan and I honestly don't even have the money to replace it currently
@mitsunee@mk.absturztau.be @alexia@starlightnet.work @carbonatedcaffeine@social.treehouse.systems Maybe a postmarketOS device that can run mainline Linux? Something with SDM845 is probably the best choice currently (or a PinePhone, but the hardware sucks).
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@alexia can i ask a quick favour of you? (no worries if not, just ignore me or tell me to buzz off lol). if you visit my profile https://k.iim.gay/@kim in your browser, how long does the scraper deterrence there take to complete on your device? it's something we're testing embedding a very simplified form of in gotosocial as an optional defense for users (defaults to off). but depending on accessibility issues it's not something we're set in stone on keeping. we're ultimately just experimenting with making it easy for users to protect themselves, but only if it doesn't compromise on our core principles of accessibility, ease of deployment and low resource usage (at least on the server side, though you'll see from our extremely minimal web client we do care about that client side too)
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In other words, I encourage you to look to other solutions.
Some that I know of in no particular order:
- go-away – alternative with No-JS challenges and more customizability
- Iocaine – actively poison AI scrapers, best paired with nam shub of enki configuration
I heard mumbles that Anubis is also getting No-Javascript methods eventually, but I don't know more than that.
Anubis has No-Javascript challenges, there's some more advanced ones in the paid offering
(feel free to add to that list, I had something bookmarked but I've lost it on my old phone)@alexia what do you mean by if you pay up? As far as I'm aware no-js support should be part of a recent anubis open source release already? (https://github.com/TecharoHQ/anubis/releases/tag/v1.20.0)
It's not enabled by default but ideally it'd be used for UAs reporting some old browser. -
@alexia what do you mean by if you pay up? As far as I'm aware no-js support should be part of a recent anubis open source release already? (https://github.com/TecharoHQ/anubis/releases/tag/v1.20.0)
It's not enabled by default but ideally it'd be used for UAs reporting some old browser.@jakob I already edited the post, I was corrected by Anubis' author. Be sure to view on the source -
@jakob I already edited the post, I was corrected by Anubis' author. Be sure to view on the source
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