• 0 Posts
  • 10 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: September 1st, 2024

help-circle


  • I struggled with this a while ago. The advent of ai and more capitalist strangulation just seem to have made that same feeling worse.

    So, what did I do? I stepped out of IT as profession completely, first of all. I’m just a worker bee now. I still have to use some tech for work, but minimal. I realize I am lucky to have been able to do this, but it helped me immensely having corporate tech be more of a choice.

    At home tech is a hobby. I self host what I need, and use what I must to get by and screw the rest. If an open source project even hints at corporate influence, I immediately start looking for something else. It’s a pain sometimes, but it’s part of the hobby.

    Couple this with trying my best to spend more time outdoors, learning new tangible skills, and just leaning more towards offline time in general really quiets my mind. And stay away from national and international news as much as you can. That stuff is poison.

    Best of luck! In my own experience, finding a balance is not an easy thing to do.




  • It’s the never ending battle between what’s secure and what’s practical. In order to have widespread adoption, it has to be easy. In order to be secure it requires layers of complication.

    It’s a yin/yang battle.

    A bank vault with walls 2 feet thick, 24/7 surveillance and requiring a two key unlock mechanism is secure compared to a house door lock on a regular suburban bungalow, but is it very practical?

    The level of digital security generally attainable is limited by how likely someone is to use it.

    2FA using keys is the closest I’ve seen to a happy medium, but it has to be implemented correctly. If the private keys are sitting on a cloud server somewhere and it gets hacked, is it more secure? Maybe not.

    Just like real defence, the walls are only as good as the foundation or weakest point.