Red Flags:
- Always Online
- User Account Sign-Up Required
- Paid Subscription
- Cloud Computing
- Software-as-a-Service
For people sick of everything requiring Internet connections, online accounts and subscriptions
Red Flags:
I'm not sure I understand the need to avoid the Internet connection?
For me, home computing is about:
But I do use the Internet. Daily, or almost. I just seer away from the social media (I'm on the fediverse, that's all my online 'social' presence) and all the 'must have' trendy apps and services. Heck if I was not married already, I would not use an app to date. I would do like we used to do up until rather recently: I would go talk to any woman I would have deemed interesting enough.
I even use a cloud (just not GAFAM) ;)
Thanks for commenting. I checked my comment, and it seems I did just write "Internet connection" - just a mistake from rewriting the comment and not leaving it in a coherent state. Sorry about that.
I use the Internet daily as well. I'd just like to avoid being locked-in to some remote service.
For someone to participate in this subreddit, they only need to want to rely more on hardware/software that they control instead of those controlled by someone else. As for why they might want this - different people might have different reasons.
A few possible reasons people might be interested:
But the community is open to members regardless of why they are interested.
As for why they might want this - different people might have different reasons.
And they're all perfectly fine reasons, if you ask me. To give you some context, despite living in a big city with a real fast Internet access I worked my ass of in order to optimize my blog so that it loads as fast as possible even on a shitty connection. And will update it every time I find a new way to optimize it a little more. (if you're curious, switching to the AVIF file format for images was the most impactful change, next to using no script at all, it's only static HTML/CSS, obviously reducing the overall size of the pages ;)
I also moved back to reading print books/newspapers out of privacy and ownership concerns.
Very interesting community, seems like a worthwhile perspective to approach digital sovereignty from. I feel like ultimately there might be some overlap with the !privacy@lemmy.ml and especially !selfhosted@lemmy.world comms, so I think less reliance on ‘internet’-enabled/hosted software might be a boon to delineate this a little.
Good luck with the comm!
Thanks. Privacy can be one benefit of controlling your own computing. I also aim to promote subject matter that is more accessible to people with less technical expertise, whereas self-hosting seems to involve quite a bit of technical experience.
I created the comm after realising that a lot of the problems that people are raising (very valid) concerns about in recent times (declining quality of platforms, privacy issues, etc) all stem from a root cause, that being the transfer of computing tasks to centralised platforms.
It can be. Controlling your own devices enables you to reject planned obsolescence, which produces unnecessary e-waste. It also allows you to avoid having unwanted "generative AI" features, which are responsible for a lot of electricity and hardware consumption.