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Joined 6 months ago
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Cake day: October 17th, 2025

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  • I fully agree with you in wanting to keep your health telemetry private. I too baulked at smart watches for the same reasons. I hate the idea of such info being collected by any company.

    I’ve found GadgetBridge paired with a cheap smartwatch to be a good solution for me. It let’s you keep your telemetry local and provides a GUI for the info I want: steps, heart rate, activity, sleep, etc.

    It sounds like they have some support for AsteroidOS already too. They also claim “As of the next Gadgetbridge release, it should have full support for AsteroidOS, and feature-parity with AsteroidOSSync.”



  • You’re right, I probably should have phrased that as ‘they appear to be doing everything they can to monetize the consumer…’

    Actions speak louder than words and the action of modifying their TOU to remove the following really struck a nerve:

    “Does Firefox sell your personal data? Nope. Never have, never will. And we protect you from many of the advertisers who do. Firefox products are designed to protect your privacy. That’s a promise.”

    Removing this statement feels motivated by more than the excuses they’re giving - it feels like a betrayal. Subsequently shoe-horning in AI features doesn’t help reverse this sentiment, it only emboldens it.

    To each their own, but Mozilla clearly doesn’t care about being ‘the privacy focused browser’ any longer or they wouldn’t be taking their current actions.











  • I merely propose that the original claim that ‘tailgater’s are idiots’ is only half the truth and it ignores that more often than not, both parties involved are being idiots.

    Folk on the receiving end of the tailgating treatment often seem to not know about or care to respect their local laws on remaining L/R, except to pass. They appear to be ignorant of laws requiring one to pull over and allow traffic to pass if it impedes >N vehicles.

    Does it excuse tailgating? No, of course not. But it certainly explains the cause of the frustration and anger that leads to it for other drivers who do care about such laws.

    It may be your opinion that someone else is going ‘too fast’ but unless you’re an officer of the law, that’s not really your job to enforce. If someone wants to find out the hard way how sharp the bend is up ahead, I say let them.

    Tailgaters are clearly giving off an unwritten signal for ‘you’re in my way’ and want to engage you in their risky behavior. I’m inclined to let them continue doing so in front of me rather than behind. More often than not however, I see tailgating escalate to brake checking, road rage, and two idiots clinging onto their senses of righteous indignation.

    Just move over.