Just another GNUstep users blog

Why I am not using Grindr February 14th, 2020 Grindr is proprietary software that only runs on Android and iOS. It also depends on a centralized server infrastructure that stores data in unencrypted form. The company that hosts Grindr, Amazon is known for violating users privacy. Grindr also sends data to Third-Party Websites and is known for sharing users HIV status without their consent. The terms of use and privacy policy are much too long (about 50 pages), therefore most users don’t read them. If a user has read only parts of those terms, they should become suspect that Grindr violates their privacy and not use the service. I think that sensitive information should be visible only to the intended recipients and not the administrators of any servers or routers, therefore I never use Grindr. To share such sensitive information I could only use copylefted free software such as GNUnet, which has strong privacy guarantees. In GNUnet every communication is end to end encrypted and metadata leakage is minimized. This is important today where secret services such as the NSA kill on metadata. GNUnet provides social scalability while protecting metadata and it allows users to have multiple unlinkable Egos. It also uses public key cryptography which is inherently more secure than using passwords. Systems such as Alovoa still use passwords and depend on email which is unencrypted by default. Even if used with GPG email leaks metadata. Since GNUnet is a peer to peer network no centralized servers storing data of millions of users are needed. It also provides a replacement for centralized identity providers such as Facebook that act as a kind of password store. When you send personal data to Facebook, the NSA gets the data anyway and they can abuse it for killing people. Please do not do that. Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Why I am not using Grindr

Spotify is Defective by Design October 12th, 2019 I never used Spotify, since it contains DRM. Instead I still buy DRM-free CDs.

Most of my audio collection is stored in free formats such as FLAC and Ogg Vorbis,

or Red Book in the case of CDs, everything can be played by free players such as

VLC or mpd. Spotify, which uses a central server, also spies on the listener. Everytime you

listen a song, Spotify knows which song you have listened and when and where.

By contrast free embedded operating systems such as Rockbox do not phone home.

CDs can be baught anonymously and ripped using free software, there is no need

for an internet commection. Defective by Design recommends the book “Spotify Teardown” which I haven’t read

yet. The book is an innovative investigation of the inner workings of Spotify that

traces the transformation of audio files into streamed experience. Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Spotify is Defective by Design

The world’s most advanced UNICs of Organizers February 14th, 2019 I recently began using Emacs Org mode, a tool for keeping notes, maintaining TODO lists, planning projects, and authoring documents with a fast and effective plain-text system. Since I am a cosplayer I was looking for a repacement for Cosplanner, a non-free Android app. When I was still using Android, I once installed Cosplanner and found out that it has many nasty features. So I deleted my copy. Unlike Cosplanner, Orgmode uses a human readable text format that you can read with any text editor. This allows the user to store an Orgmode file in a git repository that can be synced between devices. Emacs was written by Richard Stallman as part of the GNU Operating System. GNU is a Unix-compatible system that respects the users freedom. Todays GNU comes mainly in form of a GNU/Linux distribution, but the Hurd (GNU’s Kernel) still exists. The Guix System Distribution is one of those, it is often called the Emacs of Distros. There are many text editors, but Emacs is probably the worlds most advanced one. Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on The world’s most advanced UNICs of Organizers

No Netflix on my Smart TV September 18th, 2018 When I went to the Conrad store in Altona, I saw that new Sony Smart TVs come with a Netflix button on the remote.

Since I oppose DRM, I would never buy such a thing. I would only buy a Smart TV that Respects My Freedom, but such a thing does not exist.

Instead I use a ThinkPad T400 as an external TV tuner and harddisk recorder, since my old TV set does not support DVB-C. As a DVB-C tuner I use the

FRITZ!WLAN Repeater DVB‑C which works well with the free VLC player. Since it lacks a CI+ slot, it cannot decode DRM encumbered streams. When Netflix was founded in 1998 they initially only offered rental DVDs only. Today most DVDs can be played on GNU/Linux using libdvdcss.

Even if most DVDs that Netflix offers do not contain strong DRM, Netflix is still a surveillance system that requires proprietary JavaScript.

When I buy DVDs, I go to a store where I can pay using cash. The Thinkpad T400 has no HDMI port and “management engine” back door is removed by installing Libreboot. Most modern Intel systems come with a HDMI port.

HDMI comes with some kind of DRM called HDCP which was developed by Intel. On newer hardware the “management engine” is used to implement video DRM.

Netflix in 4K only works on Kaby-Lake processors, which implement the latest version of Intels hardware DRM. Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on No Netflix on my Smart TV

Two years of terminal device freedom August 1st, 2018 On August 1, 2016 a new law that allows clients of German internet providers to use any terminal device they choose entered into force. Internet service providers (ISPs) are now required to give users any information you need to connect an alternative router. In many other EU countries there is still no such law and the Radio Lockdown Directive is compulsory in all those countries. In Germany there the old “Gesetz über Funkanlagen und Telekommunikationsendeinrichtungen” is now replaced with the new “Funkanlagengesetz”. Routers that use radio standards such as WiFi and DECT fall under the Radio Lockdown Directive and since the European Commission did not pass a delegated act yet there is no requirement to implement a lock down for current hardware. Many WiFi chipsets require non-free firmware, future generations of that non-free firmware could be used to lock down all kinds of Radio Equipment. Radio Equipment that comes with the Respects Your Freedom hardware product certification is 2.4GHz only in many cases, but some hardware that supports 5 GHz does exist. Voice over IP (VoIP) is supported by most alternative routers and free software such as Asterisk. Since most ISPs and routers use SIP it is now possible to connect modern VoIP telephones directly to routers such as the FritzBox. Many compulsory routers such as the O2 Box 6431 use SIP internally, but it is not possible to connect external SIP phones with the stock firmware. So some users install OpenWRT on their box to get rid of those restrictions. Some ISPs in the cable market don’t use SIP, but an incompatible protocol called EuroPacketCable which is unsupported by most alternative routers. Many set-top boxes used for TV streaming use Broadcom chips which offer a bad Free Software support. TV streaming could be done with free software, but many channels are scrambled requiring non-free software to unscramble. Old hardware such as the Media-Receiver Entry may become obsolete when the Telekom stops offering Start TV in 2019. No ISP publishes the interface descriptions for TV streaming, even if they could do so for the DRM-free channels. It is possible to use Kodi to watch those DRM free channels, but many features such as an Electronic Program Guide (EPG) do not work with IP TV streaming. With this new law users now have a “freedom of choice” but they do not have full “software freedom” because many embedded devices still use proprietary software. Freedom respecting terminal device are rare and often they do not implement all features a user needs. Old analogue telephones sold in the 90s did not have any of those problems. Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Two years of terminal device freedom

Robotnik Utaite – A modern Singing Computer August 31st, 2017 Hatsune Miku is now 10 years old, but I do not use the Vocaloid Software,

because it is non-free. It’s note editor that is not fully accessibile.

The other Singing Computer from Milan Zamazal is no longer maintained

and only supports English and Czech languages and singing-mode.scm is broken

in modern distributions of GNU/Linux. So I decided to replace the Festival Speech Synthesis System with a patched

espeak-ng that has its own Singing Mode and Sinsy as a MusicXML parser.

The user can type in Lilypond sourcecode in Emacs. Robotnik Utaite, the new

Singing Computer that I am currently working on uses python-ly to convert

Lilypond source code into MusicXML. I also plan to package this software for GNU Guix, a new

package management tool that is much more advanced than pacman and apt.

Therefore I won’t provide any binary packages for Trisquel or Parabola. Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Robotnik Utaite – A modern Singing Computer

DRM free Smart TV July 9th, 2017 Today is Day against DRM, so I’ll post a short update about a DRM free TV set construction that I have build in the last two month. My TV set only supports DVB-T and old analogue cable TV. Because I don’t want to buy a new one with even harder DRM and the patented H.265 codec, I am now using Kodi to watch TV. Kodi is free software and runs on a ThinkPad T400, which I also use as a DVD player. I installed Libreboot and removed the internal screen, which caused problems with the external TV set connected via VGA. Libreboot is a free BIOS replacement which removes the Intel Management Engine. The Intel Management Engine is proprietary malware which includes a back door and some DRM functions. Netflix uses this hardware DRM called the Protected Audio/Video Path on Windows 10 when watching 4K videos. The Thinkpad T400 does not even have an HDMI port, which is known to be encumbered by HDCP, an ineffective DRM that has been cracked. Instead of using DRM encumbered streaming services such as Netflix, Entertain or Vodafone TV, I still buy DVDs and pay them anonymously with cash. In my home there is a DVB-C connector, which I have connected to a FRITZ!WLAN Repeater DVB-C which streams the TV signal to the ThinkPad. The TV set is switched on and off using a FRITZ!DECT 200 which I control using a python script running on the ThinkPad. I also reuse an old IR remote and an IRDuino to control the ThinkPad. Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on DRM free Smart TV

Compulsory Routers, the EU Radio Lockdown Directive and transition to DVB-T2 March 28th, 2017 DVB-T will be switched off on 29/03/2017. I have seen ads for freenet TV,

for which I would need a new DRM-encumbered receiver. Of course I won’t

buy such a thing and use a different technology instead. I have a DVB-C terminal

in one room, but my TV set is in the other one. So I thought I could transmit

the TV signal from the source to a Raspberry Pi connected

to the TV set. On the other side there is a FRITZ!WLAN Repeater DVB‑C which

is compatible to free software Applications such as Kodi and VLC. From June 2017 the FRITZ!WLAN Repeater DVB‑C is compliant with the directives

2014/53/EU, 2009/125/EC and 2011/65/EU. The first one replaces old directives

and is called the EU Radio Lockdown Directive. This directive harms Freifunk

and many other free software projects. As there is no standard for 5 GHz WLAN

many companies fear that they won’t be allowed to sell those products legally.

The FRITZ!WLAN Repeater DVB‑C also has 5 GHz WLAN, but I only use 2.4 GHz,

because 5GHz WLAN hardware does not work well with GNU/Linux yet. The AR9271

chipset has free firmware and only supports 2.4 GHz. It works well with the

Linux-Libre kernel and it’s firmware can be modified to support new features such as mesh networks. I recently replaced my compulsory router (an Arcadyan VGV7510KW22) with a FRITZ!Box 7430.

If you have an Enterain or Vodafone TV packet you can also watch TV using VLC.

An IP-TV compatible router (such as a Fritzbox) is needed,

a set-top-box is often included for no additional cost when you switch to NGN.

But I don’t want to use a pay TV product which requires me to use TiVo Hardware.

TiVo (formerly Rovi Corporation and Macrovision Solutions Corporation) is one

of those companies that uses a locked down GNU/Linux operating system on their

digital video recorders (DVR). Macrovision was an analogue copy protection for

video tapes (VHS). Rovi is mentioned in the manual of the Vodafone TV Center.

So if I switch to Vodafone I won’t buy the TV packet, and I may not get the

multicast IP streams which contain the TV program. In any case I will have to

pay for the cable TV terminal, which is part of my apartment. The repeater

only supports unencrypted (DRM-free) TV, so I payed 86 Euros once instead

of 8 Euros per month for an encumbered pay TV product that I won’t use. Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Compulsory Routers, the EU Radio Lockdown Directive and transition to DVB-T2

Freedom to repair. February 15th, 2017 On the I love Free Software day iFixit posted an article “iFixit Loves Repair”. For me repair is freedom. The freedom to repair is just as important as Stallman’s four freedoms. I think that computers should come with free repair manuals. Many Apple products are hard to impossible to repair. Repair at certified shops is expensive, but you can repair them yourself if you use tools and manuals from iFixit.

I once had a Mac that had a mechanical defect and I could not buy replacement parts and I did not have a repair manual at that time.

But I was able to change the battery without using any tools.

With newer hardware such as the iThings users cannot replace the battery without the use of a special screwdriver for the pentalobe screws.

In the Apple world everything is proprietary. The Lightning connector is only found on Apple hardware and incompatible with standardized USB ports.

There is also an authentification chip that implements a hardware DRM. By contrast the Fairphone uses USB which has a standardizes charging protocol.

You just need to add an 200 Ohms resistor between the data lines and connect the two power lines to 5 Volts. I once built this circuit on a breadboard.

Changing the battery is easy, no tools are needed. On many laptops it is not easy to replace the harddisk, keyboard or RAM. But on some ThinkPads supported by libreboot you have only to remove four screws to replace the keyboard.

Flashing libreboot for the first time requires removing more screws, but this only needs to be done once. Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Freedom to repair.