G’day! I’m just a Melburnian with opinions and a keyboard. Expect rants about everything from coffee prices to climate change. Warning: May contain traces of sarcasm and smashed avo.
Recent Posts
When the Watchers Are Watching Each Other: The Bondi Binder Debacle
There’s something deeply unsettling about watching the people who are supposed to be investigating serious crimes get caught up in what looks like political surveillance theater. The recent photos of Attorney General Pam Bondi’s binder showing search histories of Congress members looking through unredacted Epstein files has me thinking about just how far down the rabbit hole we’ve gone when it comes to privacy, power, and who’s watching whom.
The whole situation is a mess of contradictions that would be almost comical if it weren’t so serious. On one hand, we’ve got lawmakers accessing sensitive documents on government systems—systems that are, by design, monitored. That’s not exactly shocking. Anyone who’s worked in IT (and I’ve spent enough years in the trenches) knows that everything you do on a work computer is logged. Every search, every file access, every email. It’s Security 101.
When Government Demands Your News Feed: The FTC's Propaganda Push
I’ve been sitting here this morning, staring at my phone in disbelief. The Federal Trade Commission – you know, the agency supposedly tasked with protecting consumers and maintaining fair competition – is now apparently in the business of telling Apple News which political outlets it should promote. Specifically, they want more Fox News and Breitbart stories pushed to users.
Let me just say that again for those in the back: a government agency is demanding a private company promote specific political content.
The Great Discord Exodus That Hasn't Happened (Yet)
There’s a conversation happening right now across tech communities that feels both refreshing and frustrating in equal measure. People are genuinely fed up with Discord’s data hoarding practices and are actively looking for alternatives. The thing is, we’ve been here before, haven’t we?
Someone recently posted asking about open-source TeamSpeak alternatives for self-hosting, and the responses painted a picture that’s all too familiar. The nostalgia hit hard when someone mentioned paying three dollars a month for a Ventrilo server back in 2006. Remember those days? When we actually paid for services and in return, we got exactly what we signed up for – no data harvesting, no feature creep, no sudden policy changes that make you feel violated.