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freedomben12/09/20241 replyview on HN

I'll say things were better in the past. It's obviously subjective, but I hate the direction things are going.

The user is now viewed as a security threat to their own device, the hyper-churn culture of the javascript ecosystem is now embedding in other areas even systems (like Android, as you point out), "updates" for apps and to a lesser but growing extent OSes, are routinely pushed and forced on users regardless whether they contain new bugs/regressions or horrible UI/UX changes, more and more software is becoming proprietary SaaS and "subscription" based, and backwards compatibility is for the birds. In the name of "security", tech companies and even individual devs are turning our own home networks into opaque spy apparatuses that make network connections that we (the owners of the network) can't even inspect. Even maintaining self-hosted apps is becoming a several-hours-per-week job.

It feels like during the late 00s and early 10s we had some real golden years of open source, but now the poisonous engineering culture that pushes the above things is poised to squash it as a "daily driver" for people. For example, once Microsoft completes their requirements for TPMS and can do hardware attestation like Apple and Google, the ratchet of websites not working (or not working completely) unless the device passes hardware attestation will start, and it will make life on a Linux laptop/desktop similar to how Tor is now where you get endless CAPTCHA hell and nobody cares because you're in a tiny minority of users and many of the tools that provide technological liberation for an individual are also tools used by gray and black hat actors.

And I haven't even gotten to the Apple-ization of everything where it's becoming all about building walled gardens. I remember when compatibility was a selling point of hardware/software.

It's not all bad of course, but it does feel like a lot more bad than good is developing. Happy Monday everyone!


Replies

Zak12/09/2024

When Microsoft first proposed attestation features in 2002 under the name Palladium, it was almost universally seen as a nightmare scenario. I don't understand why most of the tech world is OK with Apple and Google doing the same thing to our phones now, and Microsoft bringing it back on Windows.

I do understand trying to bury full access to the device a bit deeper than it was on older PC operating systems. The average person doesn't know how to use a computer, and it doesn't appear there was ever much hope of that situation changing. Letting a third party verify the computer is in a certain state, however seems outright malicious.