• @unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de
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    926 months ago

    Glad to see they arent going along with the bullshit of “all russians are evil and deserve to die” that is recently going around. The russian people is under dictator oppression and deserves just as much support as any other people in the same situation.

      • @TriflingToad@sh.itjust.works
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        66 months ago

        I remember at the start of the war on practically every reddit thread I looked at were full of Russian people wanting peace and cursing their government. Weird to see people dehumanizing the people who wanted nothing but peace and love.

      • Illecors
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        46 months ago

        Only commenting on the orc part, but that’s what russians call themselves.

    • @dubyakay@lemmy.ca
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      156 months ago

      Anecdotal, I have Russian friends (a couple and their kids).

      The dad is really apologetic for his country. He also laments not being able to go back to visit his parents, because his profession would likely be in very high demand by the military so he doesn’t want to risk getting pulled in for service (even though he’s in his 40s).

      The mom already went back once, with kids. She says that the population in general, in both Moscow and the countryside, seem really oblivious to what’s going on. There’s a huge disconnect and often even disbelief about what’s going on further west. Likely due to govt media propaganda only running special operations victory headlines. Also those that are able, but down on their luck and fortune, are happy to sign up with the military for (relatively) good pay, especially if their role is not something that makes them fight at the front line directly.

      • @unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de
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        106 months ago

        I mean its pretty similar to the US recruiting their poor citizens to fight in the middle east. They are often just as oblivious to the fact that its usually entirely one sided aggression or resource wars.

    • @froh42@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      No, not all Russians are evil and deserve to die. But closing your eyes and playing oblivious to what’s happening out there, just believing the state propaganda and living in a position “oh it’s just the bad leader” is not a morally OK position.

      If there is a dictator in your country you have some moral duty to find out at least a bit about the truth.

      How do I know?

      I’m German.

      My grandparent’s generation was the one that actively closed their eyes, that actively looked away, that everything that happend was someone else’s problem. They were the Generation that arranged themselves, that did good business as long as it wasn’t them that were deported, killed or fought at in the war.

      This is not a position that is morally OK, but this is what I see of a lot of Russians. Not all, but a lot.

      • @douglasg14b@lemmy.worldOP
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        6 months ago

        I like how you just conveniently ignore the part about a dictator oppression.

        The key word here is oppression.

        A country that is closing its eyes and deserves what they’re going to get is the US. In 20 or 30 years when the US is an authoritarian oppressive State then at that point the people don’t have a choice, just like they don’t in Russia today.

        Authoritarian oppressive states don’t just let the people think what they want to think. You are groomed and indoctrinated the moment you receive education until the day you die. The easiest way to control a populace is for the populace to not even know they’re being controlled.

        A key factor to that is limiting and restricting access to outside information. Which is what Russia does which is why the Tor project is so important

        • @froh42@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          So Germany didn’t have dictator oppression in the 30s and 40s? You think we didn’t have propaganda and we didn’t just kill people for another opinion? And we had access to outside information?

          I’m talking about a moral duty to oppose, to inform yourself in spite of all that. And I know it is not easy. We Germans failed that miserably.

          The plabook Putin is playing, we’ve been through it and it is was what lead to WW2.

  • @vext01@lemmy.sdf.org
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    166 months ago

    So a web tunnel enabled web server not only serves its own pages, but also acts as a proxy to other sites and all the traffic looks like web browsing to the regular web server?

  • @CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    6 months ago

    As a token of our appreciation for your volunteer work, we’re offering a Tor t-shirt to operators who run 5 or more WebTunnel bridges during this period [November 28, 2024, and will run until March 10, 2025]

    Later:

    Maintain your bridges running for at least 1 year.

    Am I the only one confused by this wording?

    That being said, assuming the latter, that’s a lot of bandwidth for a T-shirt.

    I’d really like to see the major cloud providers donate a portion of their bandwidth to the cause…but that might just be wishful thinking on my part.

  • @perfectly_boiled_pizza@lemmy.world
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    66 months ago

    If you want to help but find configuration hard you can easily help by running a Snowflake proxy on your phone or in your browser.

    I have configured my phone run a Snowflake proxy every time my phone is connected to WiFi and charging. It’s automated and does not require me to do anything. I have turned on notifications that tell me every time I’m helping someone connecting to Tor. It gives me a good feeling every time.

  • @pHr34kY@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    I’ve been running a relay from home for years. I think I’ll have a shot at this. I’m not sure we want Russians on tor right now though.

    • fmstrat
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      286 months ago

      I’m curious on this, why? There are many people in Russia who disagree with what is happening, but have no way to access information without monitoring or censorship. This is what Tor was made for.

    • drkt
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      216 months ago

      If you don’t want a certain geographic of people on Tor, then you don’t believe in Tor.

  • @czardestructo@lemmy.world
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    16 months ago

    Does anyone know if running a webtunnel attracts additional unwanted hacker attempts to a domain more so than just hosting normal stuff? I presume its all bots and the simple act of hosting anything gets lots of exposure regardless.

    • @douglasg14b@lemmy.worldOP
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      26 months ago

      I honestly don’t have an answer to that but from my understanding running a web tunnel from your home IP can have negative consequences in relation to your address being flagged as a public proxy.

      With the potential to be added to certain automatic ban lists. But more likely than not you’ll be added to a list of potentially untrustable addresses which means you’ll be doing a lot more CAPTCHAS in the future