(no title)
whitewingjek | 2 years ago
Ultimately, this is the wrong approach. The internet should be "open," and people or companies should be free to link to whatever they want without penalty.
[1] https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2023/04/saving-news-big-tech
Drblessing|2 years ago
> Break up the ad-tech sector, open up app stores, end-to-end delivery
I thought they stood for freedom, and now they want to pass laws on how software can work?!
Their literally saying this software code can't be this way, you need to submit a PR to change how it works to match this law. If this isn't the antithesis of freedom I don't know what is.
sysstemlord|2 years ago
suddenexample|2 years ago
These news organizations want to have their cake and eat it too. They rely on these platforms for traffic. Now they also want to be paid for getting that traffic. That's not how this works.
tomlin|2 years ago
int_19h|2 years ago
2OEH8eoCRo0|2 years ago
Which RFC is that?
throw0101a|2 years ago
* https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc8890
omginternets|2 years ago
nceqs3|2 years ago
worik|2 years ago
I find that a puzzling comment. EFF has a strange way of showing its allegiance to "Big Tech".
What do I not know? How does the EFF demonstrate its allegiance to them?
I took the EFF's work on privacy as an impediment to "Big Tech"'s business model. How am I wrong?
halJordan|2 years ago
Obscurity4340|2 years ago