I've generally been up front when starting new jobs that nothing impinges my ability to work on FLOSS software on my own time. Only one company put a restriction in for working on FLOSS software in the same technical space as my $DAYJOB.
Morpheus made it very clear to neo that taking the red pill was a one way trip to enlightenment. Cypher references the red/blue pill test when talking to Neo so we can assume he did the same with him. I think Morpheus is pretty clear there is no going back.
The article mentioned there is a long history of forks in the open source Doom world. It seems the majority of the active developers just moved to the new repository.
I read the first link in the thread that examines his blog post about London. While I don't agree with his politics he wouldn't be unusual amongst a significant minority of the population who vote for the likes of Reform. That seems to be enough for some to draw the conclusion he's a Nazi he wants to arbitrarily murder people.
This automatic jump to accusing anyone who you disagree with a Nazi just devalues the term.
I helped with the initial Aarch64 emulation support for qemu as well as working with others to make multi-threaded system emulation a thing. I maintain a number of subsystems but perhaps the biggest impact was implementing the cross compilation support that enabled the TCG testing to be run by anyone including eventually the CI system. This is greatly helped by being a paid gig for the last 12 years.
I've done a fair bit of other stuff over my many decades of using FLOSS including maintain a couple of moderately popular Emacs packages. I've got drive by patches in loads of projects as I like to fix things up as I go.
I run stock on a pixel although I do have droidify installed and prefer that too the play store for most things. Especially for the freeze app where all my corporate stuff is run from.
I have paid for Newsblur ever since they cancelled Google Reader. I also use elfeed on various emacs instances for project and update feeds of various types.
It's all relative I guess. I can see why the original GPT's used the Reddit corpus for training. However I've always been a little sceptical about the quality of the training set in any social media given how much it exaggerates the extremes of people's behaviour.
I didn't know who Kirk was until the assassination I have better things to do with my limited time than go on a deep dive into their history before posting any comment on the news. I kinda got the vibe when I realised that was who Cartman was based on in the recent South Park.
On mobile any particular useful compression will become on-demand hardware acceleration which can be very power efficient. I'm fairly sure webp had hardware acceleration on most chipsets these days.
I don't need to get through winter, I just need to get from dusk to when the cheap energy is starts. Currently that's about 4kwh - or a small portion of my car battery before or recharges on the cheap rate.
Without algorithmic transparency how can you ensure it's not a propaganda machine?
That said tilting the algorithm isn't exclusively a TikTok problem, I would love to know how active the bots have been the last week on all the US owned social media platforms. Is there a push for division? How would we know?
There are large areas of open source that don't rely on volunteer labour because companies with a vested interest pay people to work on them. They tend to be the obvious large projects that are continuously developed and gain new features. The trouble with something like xz is it was mostly "done" (as in it did the thing it was intended to do) but still needed maintenance to address the minor niggles, bug reports and updates to tooling and dependencies.
The foundations could do a better job here of supporting the maintainers. After Heartbleed the Linux Foundation started the Core Infrastructure Initiative to help fund those under recognised projects. I would hope the people running that could be more proactive identifying those critical understaffed components.
Edit I think it's now called the Open Source Security Foundation: https://openssf.org/
We can remember it for you wholesale?