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Cake day: February 10th, 2025

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  • You control what you install on your pc and I’d be willing to bet that whatever open source OS it is, probably uses Systemd.

    They have set this up in a way that yes, right now at 11:21pm UTC on March 24th it isn’t being enforced or required.

    It is using systemd, yes. It could be using openRC, sysvinit, runit, etc just as easily.

    Systemd isn’t a requirement for Linux. It is simply the most useful init system currently. If that ever stops being the case then changing init systems or entire even distros is a fairly trivial task. If systemd were ever to require me to submit to a 3rd party verification of my age I’d just use a different init system.

    There is nothing that any open source project can do that would force me to keep using their software if I don’t want to.

    They shouldn’t have done this. In mine, and many, many other peoples opinions as well.

    If your opinion represents a large group of people then you should have no trouble maintaining a fork.


  • What is there to evolve? Just keep it up to date with the mainstream project while applying this one patch. This is as useful as the signatures that prohibit use of comments to train LLMs.

    That sounds super easy on paper. In practice nobody is going to do this long-term.

    The kind of people who get massively upset about this are not the kind of people that are going to make a long term commitment to actually doing anything. Forking systemd is performative activism, that’s it.


  • As far as I can tell the Name Email and location are all voluntarily provided by the user.

    So is birthDate.

    This is something that will be used whether you want it to or not (that makes it invasive) because of the laws around it (of course depending on where you are).

    How? First and most importantly, systemd doesn’t do anything to enforce, require or verify the field.

    Second, I control what is installed on my PC, that’s the ENTIRE POINT of using a FOSS OS. The FREEDOM to install whatever I want, or not. If there is an application that is using that field to enforce some bs law, then I simply won’t install it.

    This isn’t Windows, there isn’t a Microsoft to force you to install software updates that you don’t want. You’re FREE to not install software that does things that you don’t like. This includes any hypothetical future software that would require this field or validate this field.









  • It paints him as an active danger, puts his picture on a wanted poster, includes his full name, workplace and the city and state where he lives and then writes up an article like an after action report of a cyberattack.

    It then implies that he’s going to do it again and that he can’t be persuaded and so will be ‘harder to stop’.

    Taylor believes what he’s doing is right, which makes him harder to stop than someone acting for money. Taylor already has the resume line and knows the codebase well enough to try again. That’s the true believer pattern. The argument is ideological, so persuasion is off the table.

    So if he’s done a bad thing, he’s going to do it again, and you can’t persuade him.

    If you can’t read the implied call to action then you’re being deliberately dense.