38 points
*

For those who don’t know, if you shop on Amazon, you can have a portion of your purchase price go to EFF every time you do. You pay the same price, EFF gets a slice of the pie, and Daddy Bezos loses a few bucks. Edit: Use the affiliate link not the smile link, Amazon stopped the smile program.

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38 points

Or, here’s a crazy idea: don’t shop on amazon at all.

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Can you provide an alternative that isn’t a PITA? Amazon is successful because it makes shopping easy, often more secure than shopping elsewhere, and is more ecological than shopping in person. Where else can I get a dozen completely different category of items without checking out 12 times? Should I drive to 12 different places, and burn all that gas, just to spite Amazon? Where can I shop where I can comparison shop between a hundred different brands and options, to get the item I want and not just what the shop owner carries?

I’m not being facetious; I want an alternative, but there’s only so much inconvenience I’ll accept.

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4 points

I window shop on Amazon, then order direct from the manufacturer.

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2 points
*

I just assume you are in the US and i can’t speak for the situation there. Here in the EU there are plenty of options. Sure it’s a bit more expensive sometimes, but often times it’s not.

And the convenience, I get it. Amazon customer support is unbeatable. From what I hear it is getting worse, though.

For me in the EU it is possible, but sometimes a struggle. The ideological thing makes it worth it for me, and if there are more and more people that don’t use Amazon (as often), there may be a time when it dies.

The only items I bought on Amazon since coronavirus hit are a phone charger, some shirts that aren’t available anywhere else and a pedal for a sewing machine.

So I can’t tell you an alternative the alternative you are looking for, but for me it is a lot of small to large online stores and some offline stores as well. There isn’t quite something as convenient that has virtually everything out there, afaik.

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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17 points
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Deleted by creator
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11 points
*

Use the amazon affiliate link not the amazon smile one

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19 points

Fixed it for you: Tell Congress: Don’t Allow Patents

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4 points

Which politicians are pushing this?

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86 points

Two pieces of technology are behind the Internet as we know it today.

Neither one is patented.

They are TCP/IP and Linux.

All the network traffic runs over TCP/IP.

95%+ of the servers run Linux. So do the Android phones and Chromebooks.

Clearly, patent protection in software is not required for society to benefit greatly from technological innovation in software.

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5 points

TIL UDP Traffic runs on TCP.

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4 points

Psh. UDP isn’t used at any scale anymore. /s

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5 points

I use it all the time

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5 points

I use it all the time

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5 points

I use it all the time

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5 points

I use it all the time

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16 points

“TCP/IP” is conventionally used to indicate the whole protocol suite; including UDP, ICMP and sometimes even ARP.

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1 point

Technically the parent protocol is IP.

In all my years I have never heard someone suggest that TCP is a catch all term.

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1 point

Psh

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4 points

It does it you want to be sure it is delivered!

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1 point

Wut

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23 points

Linux isn’t a patentable thing. It’s not one idea or even really a new one. I agree with your premise though. Patents, in nearly all cases, suck.

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7 points

Patents have been an issue for Linux before. For example, memory deduplication (KSM) was delayed and modified to avoid a patent on using hashes for this purpose, resulting in a potentially inferior implementation due to patents.

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20 points

Linux isn’t a patentable thing.

Yes, that’s been true so far. Are you sure it’s true under the newly proposed law?

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5 points
Removed by mod
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1 point

What would you patent? “A program which handles low level functionality and manages other programs?” I suppose what I mean is that there is “prior art”. You can’t patent something if it isn’t new and the concept of Linux isn’t. Linux isn’t the first kernel. This law wouldn’t change that. The first person to create a kernel though, under this law that might perhaps (?) have been patentable. Which would’ve crippled the entire software industry in it’s infancy. Yay patents!

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1 point

Thank you for posting this

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