Hey all,
irregardless of the split in our community between privacy pragmatists
and privacy absolutists, I think we should take note of this step
Mozilla has taken, as I believe FSFE still has a Facebook page (last
active on September 21st as far as I can ascertain).
> Dear global community we’ve had the opportunity to interact with over the past several years here:
>
> We’re taking a break from Facebook.
>
> At Mozilla we champion platforms and technologies that are good for the web and good for the people that use it.
> We stand up for transparency and user control because they make the web healthier for us all.
>
> That’s why we are pressing pause on any Facebook activity. Mark Zuckerberg has just promised to improve Facebook’s settings and make them more protective, which is a start! Please do that! But we can’t help but think we’ve heard it before, so we’re still going to wait and see what materializes before we resume spending our ad dollars or time here.
>
> IN THE MEANTIME:
> If you need support for Firefox or want to tweet at us, you can find us here: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/
> and https://twitter.com/mozilla
(Non-tracked link to the source:
https://web.archive.org/web/20180323091845/https://de-de.facebook.com/mozil…)
What do you guys think?
Best regards,
Jonke
Hi all,
a friend is looking for a good Free Software Project Management tool that she
says offers "similar experience as MS Projects or Asana", including Budget,
Mile stones, task assignments etc.
Anyone here has a good recommendation?
Best,
Erik
--
No one shall ever be forced to use non-free software
Erik Albers | Programme Manager & Communication | FSFE
OpenPGP Key-ID: 0x8639DC81 on keys.gnupg.net
>From "my very own world", I worked on an earlier version of this project
for three years (not all the time, though), but the latest version to
scan local disk drives is a complete rewrite by two of our other
developers, all written in Python and Django and some frontend stuff:
https://joinup.ec.europa.eu/collection/open-source-observatory-osor/news/se…
The version I worked on was a "web scanner" service to scan municipal
web sites to discover if they accidentally were leaking private
information. The "data scanner" can't be a service but must be installed
locally because it scans data that should never leave the premises of
the given organizations.
In all cases, it's nice that it's possible to do that kind of
specialized application in a way that's completely open to reuse:
"The software can easily be set up for testing and pilots. Next to
sharing all of the source code as open source, Magenta is making the
tool available in an Ubuntu container, ready for use."
best regards
Carsten