Monday, April 25, 2011

Actie voor meer (gebruik van) HTTPS sites

De Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and Access zijn een internationale campagne begonnen: HTTPS Now, met de bedoeling gebruikers meer bewust te maken van de mogelijkheden tot en het belang van veilig internet surfen. Het https protocol versleutelt de informatie die tussen de site en de gebruiker wordt uitgewissled

Een eerst stap kan al gezet worden door Firefox gebruikers door de add on HTTPS Everywhere te installeren. Allerlei grote sites die al versleuteling als mogelijkheid aanbieden maar niet als standaard, zoals diverse Google diensten, worden via deze add on automatisch via https benaderd.
De bedoeling is dat er ook meer info komt over welke sites wel of geen https aanbieden; deze info wil de EFF met behulp van de massa der gebruikers gaan verzamelen.
Dit kan op deze site: https://www.httpsnow.org/

Bron: https://www.eff.org/press/archives/2011/04/19-0

Friday, April 22, 2011

IPhone slaat bewegingsprofielen een jaar lang op

In Duitsland gaat de politiek zich bemoeien met het opslaan van bewegingsprofielen van IPhone gebruikers. De IPhone slaat de locatie van de beller op en bewaart de gegevens een jaar lang in het apparaat. Zo zijn met een openbaar beschikbaar programma bewegingsprofielen vast te stellen van iedere gebruiker. Bijna niemand is zich van deze inbreuk op de privacy bewust.
De Duitse Datenschutz, die de privacy bewaakt, heeft Apple op dit beleid aangesproken maar Apple heeft nog niets van zich laten horen.
bron en meer informatie: http://www.tagesschau.de/multimedia/video/ondemand100_id-video898570.html

Friday, April 1, 2011

Wie zegt dat Linux distro's niet samen kunnen werken?

Al was het maar om een 1 April grap te fabriceren:
http://news.opensuse.org/2011/04/01/the-canterbury-distribution/

http://www.debian.org/ etc.

The Canterbury Distribution

We are pleased to announce the birth of the Canterbury distribution. Canterbury is a merge of the efforts of the community distributions formerly known as Debian, Gentoo, Grml, openSUSE and Arch Linux.

The target is to produce a really unified effort and be able to stand up in a combined effort against proprietary operating systems, to show off that the Free Software community is actually able to work together for a common goal instead of creating more diversity.

Canterbury Gentoo openSUSE Arch Linux Debian Grml

Features

The Canterbury distribution will combine the best of the linux world to another game changer for the good of the users:

  • Simple as Arch - technologically simple and bleeding edge.
  • Stable as Debian - highly dependable.
  • Malleable as Gentoo - you get what you really want.
  • Live as Grml - readily usable.
  • Openminded as openSUSE - broad and welcoming for everyone.

The Canterbury Project

April 1st, 2011 by Henne

We are pleased to announce the birth of the Canterbury distribution. Canterbury is a merge of the efforts of the community distributions formerly known as Debian, Gentoo, Grml, openSUSE and Arch Linux to produce a really unified effort and be able to stand up in a combined effort against proprietary operating systems. To show off that the Free Software community is actually able to work together for a common goal instead of creating more diversity!

Canterbury will be as technologically simple as Arch, as stable as Debian, malleable as Gentoo, have a solid Live framework as Grml, and be as open minded as openSUSE.

Joining the the Canterbury Project Arch Linux developer Pierre Schmitz explained:

Arch Linux has always been about keeping its technology as simple as possible. Combining efforts into one single distribution will dramatically reduce complexity for developers, users and of course upstream projects. Canterbury will be the next evolutionary step of Linux distributions.

no arch anymore, sorry!

Gerfried FuchsGerfried Fuchs, who gave a talk about Debian at last year’s openSUSE conference, said

While DEX (Debian Derivatives Exchange) might have been a good idea in principle, its point of view is too limited. We need to reach out further for true success.

no debian anymore. sorry

Robin H. Johnson

Robin H. Johnson, lead of the Gentoo Infrastructure team, in a panel of core Gentoo developers at SCALE9x:

I really hate compiling-induced downtime. I’ve been looking forward to installing packages with just a couple of keystrokes. By building on the efforts of other successful distributions, we can take the drudgery out of system
maintenance.

no gentoo anymore. sorry!

Michael Prokop, founder of the Grml live CD, can be quoted on the effort:

We managed to create a universal live build framework with grml-live. Our vision was always that it will be universally usable to further the spreading of Free Software.

no grml anymore. sorry!

It's that dude from emergency room. I swear!Last year’s openSUSE conference had the topic of “Collaboration Across Borders”. Klaas Freitag, respected member of the community, mentioned

The conference motto was set intentional and actually this is what I had in mind as a positive outcome for the conference!

no opensuse anymore. sorry!

Please understand that this announcement is just the first step, all the necessary changes will happen in the upcoming days. You can use the #canterbury-project hashtag to give us your thoughts and prayers on twitter or identi.ca. If you need further information don’t hesitate to contact someone from your distribution!


Source: http://news.opensuse.org/2011/04/01/the-canterbury-distribution/

Nagekomen bericht:

De FSF the Free Software Foundation promoot de analoge printer.