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> > As an example: a an African American janitor in our kids' school voted republican in 2024 for the first time in his life, because the park in his Brooklyn neighborhood has become a shanty town and he can't work out there.

> Okay, first off, I am just very confused by this sentence. How is the "shanty town" preventing him from working? Does he work from his home in Brooklyn? Is the school located in the park? Does he want to work in the park but is force to work at the school? I know this isn't the most important part, but I haven't been able to parse the story.

So just to clarify, GP said he was being prevented from _working out_, i.e. exercising.


Ah, my bad. That does seem to lower the stakes a bit.

Well if we're including islands then Hawai'i is pretty far away...

I'm a different commenter but yeah, solutions exist. For example systemd-cryptenroll let's you use a FIDO token (or TPM or PKCS#11 smartcard) to unlock your encrypted disk and it's very easy to set up. Quite literally a single command.

Windows Hello serves the same purpose for Windows, though I'm sure there are caveats/differences.


If it's a fido hardware token you still need to make sure you have a backup token. It's a lot simpler on windows/macos where you can use biometrics for the same purpose.


You can setup multiple keys. It would be crazy not to include a simple ascii hash key in addition.


They already said "Chromium-based browsers."


I was meaning specifically.


I have no opinion on Chrome skins and forks as they are still chromium


Uhm you can curl https://api.protonmail.ch/pks/lookup?op=get&search=$email_ad... for any valid $email_address and get the public key.

I have used this to send signed/encrypted mail to a ProtonMail recipient. It worked, until he responded inline without encrypting it to my private key, thereby completely defeating the point.

(Later I informed him of how to automatically sign and encrypt outgoing mails to my account, as that is possible too, but not obvious at all.)

PM should make the more obvious, but in principle the interoperability is there and works.


In my personal experience, people from Latin American countries will sometimes point out that they are American because they come from North or South America.

Which is, of course, true; however, in English conversation, it's often nothing more than pedantry. In Spanish it makes more sense, since there is a separate demonym for a US person that doesn't co-opt the term "American."

Outside of Romance language speakers born on the American continents, I agree that everyone seems fine calling US-born persons "Americans" without much confusion nor gnashing of teeth.


It’s even more amusing in some ways. A common way to refer to those from the USA in Brazil, for instance (even an official one!) is ‘Norte Americano’.

Which is all kinds of weird because - what about Mexico and Canada? And what about the ‘United states’ part?

It’s just to disambiguate from ‘Americano’ as in what others in South America sometimes use to refer to latin Americans and as a little bit of a FU to the USA, hahah.


Ahh, I forgot about that...and to be transparent, I actually have no idea what French Guyana, Haiti, or Belize typically do to differentiate between people of the American continent(s) and US persons. I should have said Hispanoamerica, but oh well.


> I actually have no idea what French Guyana, Haiti, or Belize typically do to differentiate between people of the American continent(s) and US persons.

In French, people from the Americas are américains. This includes, say québecois and Brazilians. When context matters, people from the US are états-uniens.


Perhaps in Haiti, I don’t know. But at least in France, “américain” means from the US 99% of the time.


Probably because the US are much more mentioned than other American countries. But that’s not really the point, though. People from the US are américains, they’re part of the group of people living in America (which, in French and when it is not qualified, refers to all of them, North, Central, and South).

The point is that nobody would object if you refer to someone from anywhere else in the Americas as américain. Like my lab mate from Buenos Aires or friends from Montréal. And we’re definitely not in Haiti.


If I’ve learned anything in Brazil, it’s that it’s all good bro - as long as you aren’t Argentinian. Then we need to fight, or something hah.


North America also formally has two United States: Mexico and America.


It's like saying Apple Computers is an Irish company and not a US one because of where they file their corporate taxes.


Normally I wouldn't say anything, but since we're on the topic of mixing up two different concepts:

I suspect you meant to say "wary." Wary means "cautious," "weary" means "tired."


I think wary would have been a better word, but I really did mean "weary", as in I would find the ordeal tiresome or bothersome? I wouldn't disagree if you said that's bad grammar still.


Weary and wary are also homophones, in certain dialects at least


Hey, I recognize your username, I bought RCU this year because I wanted to encrypt my reMarkable without losing data. I could have used the cloud or whatever, but I found your software and chose it because it is local-only and FOSS. Also reasonably priced.

Thanks for your work! I have enjoyed RCU and now use it regularly for backups, file transfer, etc. I'm glad to hear that it seems to be sustainable.


The idea (outlined in the QubesOS documentation) is to clone the git repo of their website, verify the PGP commit signatures, then render the website yourself. Then you can be reasonably sure the website is legitimate, modulo a DoS attack stopping you from receiving updates to the website code, I suppose.

Getting the correct PGP public key appears to be an exercise left to the reader, but if you are already running e.g. Fedora, you can view the packaged QubesOS distro keys distributed by your current OS, cross-reference that with a second source such as a PGP keyserver, and unless you're being Mossaded upon you're probably good if they match.


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