No VPN (unless your ISP is extremely shady, then do use a VPN or change ISP), no overly zealous adblock (ublock origin on default settings should be fine), no JS blocking / weird privacy extensions / whatever, nno PiHole, just what your average, relatively tech-savvy geek would use.
HN readerships's problems with Cloudflare are mostly their own fault. "normal" internet users don't have these problems[1].
[1] except for people in specific countries, and I do feel sorry for those.
>[1] except for people in specific countries, and I do feel sorry for those.
Normal people also travel, and ended in those said countries sometimes. Which is the time when you need these things to work from any kind of connection.
Hmmmm, it's rare that I'll bite, but in this instance, I just have to
> You need to become more like a "normal person."
Isn't in inherently problematic that there is even a definition of a "normal person"? Who gets to judge this? Why do I have to conform? This immediately creates in-groups and out-groups. We should all know better than to allow this to happen. Classification is fine. Probably even needed to help with inclusion. Restriction based on classification can very quickly become problematic.
> No VPN (unless your ISP is extremely shady, then do use a VPN or change ISP)
That's all ISPs by now. You should never just trust any authority logging what you do. What is fine today might not be fine with tomorrow's government and those logs (as much as some might pretend they are not) are permanent.
VPN bans will start to pop up all over the place soon and everyone half-paying attention knows why
> no overly zealous adblock (ublock origin on default settings should be fine)
And what is the definition of overly zealous? Chrome has already dropped support for ublock, more or less. Adblocking is directly hostile to the data-hoovering machine. That should be enough reason to use very restrictive adblocking. I am using every filter list there is with Firefox on Linux. Cloudflare's checks are basically always fine. ReCaptcha, however, is a nightmare.
> no JS blocking / weird privacy extensions / whatever
Well, most of the web doesn't work when blocking JS outright. So I guess we've lost that battle. Though I'd argue that things like reader-mode and the ability to just get text content is pretty important to quite a lot of people still, especially those with disabilities. I don't understand the derogatory tone used when calling privacy extensions weird and the 'whatever' part is just a flippant dismissal of an entire ecosystem of extensions and applications that have a right to exist
> nno PiHole
PiHole is soon going to be the only way to protect yourself, considering what Google is pushing for with manifest v3. I don't yet use it, because it's a pain in the ass, but I'd rather have less internet and more control than vice versa
> just what your average, relatively tech-savvy geek would use.
Why do you think that you should be the one to define what or who that is? Furthermore, why should anyone be given that right?
What are we really losing by allowing people to have custom setups vs. what are we losing when we don't?
> HN readerships's problems with Cloudflare are mostly their own fault. "normal" internet users don't have these problems
This reliance on the definition of "normal" is problematic, for the aforementioned reasons. You don't know what normal is and having a gate-keeper of this definition will lead to ever-smaller circles of people falling under that definition, until one day you are no longer normal and then what?
> [1] except for people in specific countries, and I do feel sorry for those.
Get ready to feel sorry for yourself in the near future :)
No VPN (unless your ISP is extremely shady, then do use a VPN or change ISP), no overly zealous adblock (ublock origin on default settings should be fine), no JS blocking / weird privacy extensions / whatever, nno PiHole, just what your average, relatively tech-savvy geek would use.
HN readerships's problems with Cloudflare are mostly their own fault. "normal" internet users don't have these problems[1].
[1] except for people in specific countries, and I do feel sorry for those.