It's not so much that they object to hearing those opinions, it's that major news organizations' opinion sections have a noticeable impact on the opinions of the wider public. Jeff Bezos probably doesn't care that much about his staff's opinion of him, but he would sure like it if they would make it their job to push 340 million people toward sharing his opinions.
This is true. For this reason, US doctors of osteopathic medicine generally don't like to be called "osteopaths", to avoid being associated with their pseudoscientist counterparts.
Technically not a good choice for this community specifically. 2FAS Auth operates out of the USA. Being FOSS does change the implications of that, though.
Looks like development on AndOTP stopped ~4 years ago (July 2021). There's definitely an "if it ain't broke" factor, but the way Android keeps dropping support for older SDK apps, you will probably need to switch to something else eventually. I hadn't heard of Aegis before this thread, but apparently one of its big features is support for importing from other authenticator apps (including AndOTP and Google Authenticator).
This one's not strictly enshittification-related, but I find YouTube Comment Search (Firefox, Chrome) extremely useful. YouTube videos frequently have way more comments than any sensible person is going to read through. By searching for keywords, you can check whether somebody else already said what you were thinking and 👍 that instead of posting another duplicate comment that will get buried forever.
Uhhhhhh, bem vindo a EasyList/uBO – Cookie Notices.
Sorry, can't speak Portuguese beyond the stuff out the front of Nando's. uBlock Origin includes two lists in the settings (both off by default) that also handle bypassing cookie notices. The other one is AdGuard/uBO – Cookie Notices, but I've been getting by with just the first one enabled. Useful if you want to keep your number of extensions down.
EDIT: Also just realizing this is not Portuguese. Told you I can't speak it.
GPL wouldn't prevent this in any way. It doesn't compel you to provide source unless you're also providing binaries. That's exactly what they're going to do, only show their work upon release. Not defending that choice, just explaining that it would be perfectly GPL-compliant.
In a way, Discord is to Matrix as Reddit is to Lemmy. Where Discord/Reddit are centrally hosted by the company that owns them (meaning they set the rules, their downtime is your downtime, etc.), Matrix/Lemmy are federated platforms mostly hosted by other users. If you understand Lemmy, you get the basic idea of Matrix, except that it's meant for live chat instead of threaded forum discussions.
Something people get stuck on about Discord is the expression "Discord server", in the sense of "Join my Discord server." This is technically not accurate: Discord servers are more like subreddits are on Reddit, in that Discord is actually hosting all of them and to some degree in charge of them. They're not servers in the Lemmy/Matrix sense, as in "the place where you come from", like lemm.ee or lemmy.world are, they're more like individual communities.
The equivalent of this on Matrix (i.e. a Discord "server"/Reddit subreddit/Lemmy community) is called a space. From there, the analogy follows in a pretty straightforward way. You sign up with a homeserver and join whatever Matrix spaces ("Discord servers") are interesting to you. Like Discord, you can either use Matrix from your web browser or download an app--unlike Discord, there's tons of apps instead of just the one official one.
That's the concept. It works pretty well, sometimes. I've been using it daily for about four years, and when using a PC, it's pretty good. There's several fairly mature web/desktop apps, including the quasi-official one, Element. The problems start when you look to use Matrix from Android/iOS. All of the mobile apps offer a heavily degraded experience compared to desktop or even competing platforms like Discord--and that's including the fact that the official Discord app is awful.
None of the mobile apps are in a complete or stable enough condition to be sensible replacements for Discord unless you heavily temper your expectations. If you want to use Matrix on your phone--and it's 2025, so you probably do--you basically have to be ideologically invested in Matrix to make it your primary live chat platform. If you can deal with the problems because you believe in the ideals of decentralization and end-to-end encryption, then Matrix is workable.
And welcome to the jam.