When I started angel investing in the late 1990s, a tech investment included a significant technology risk, with the potential upside being groundbreaking innovation. Being an investor at this time meant taking a considerable technology risk and betting on actual tech, such as nanotech, semiconductors or biotech.

E-commerce, albeit hyped and interesting, was not considered tech. It was “Business 2.0”, plain and straightforward, hype included.

  • demesisx@infosec.pub
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    2 days ago

    I read four words then was hit with this.

    You’ve just hit the article limit with your free Sifted account.

    Ok, ok. If you insist. I won’t read your article.

          • joshchandra@midwest.social
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            2 days ago

            Doing so would break nearly all Internet access. Do you really run a whitelist rather than a blacklist? Is it not tedious to add hundreds of domains to one rather than a few to the other?

            • 𝔗𝔢𝔯 𝔐𝔞𝔵𝔦𝔪𝔞@jlai.lu
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              1 day ago

              I do ! I use NoScript in Firefox, and I allow scripts selectively when they’re needed. You’d be surprised how many websites just work with everything off !

              This may differ depending on your usage, though. I don’t really use in-browser apps if at all possible, and I don’t use conventional social media aside from YouTube and Reddit (PeerTube and Lemmy are better but there’s still too much info / people on the corporate versions to fully switch over)

            • GnuLinuxDude@lemmy.ml
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              2 days ago

              I actually do this. With uBlock Origin you can set to default block any JS (or just 3rd party JS) and then whitelist by domains. Then you can lock in per-site settings.

              • joshchandra@midwest.social
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                2 days ago

                Well, I recently left uBO for AdNauseam because it actively attacks advertisers by clicking every link (thereby leading to garbage data that messes up their stats), but it can’t operate with uBO simultaneously. I’ll see what I can do to copy this approach since I can’t seem to find a whitelist-only-JS feature in it…

                  • joshchandra@midwest.social
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                    1 day ago

                    Oops, right. For Firefox, though, it’s tethered to Mozilla accounts for sync, right?

                    I’m also hoping to find a way to reach and use a whitelist more easily, although I suppose it’s mostly one-time activation.

                    But I think I’m gonna go the NoScript route that someone else mentioned here, since that lets you selectively enable some JS while disabling others on the same website.

            • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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              1 day ago

              Do you really run a whitelist rather than a blacklist?

              That’s a weird question. That ‘yes’ seems as easy as “do you wear your seat belt? Every TIME?!?”

              Is it not tedious to add hundreds of domains to one rather than a few to the other?

              After about a dozen you’re kinda set. I will enable one-offs in a private window, usually for shit news sites or the very occasional referral farm, and the exceptions are all reverted when I close the tab.

            • reksas@sopuli.xyz
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              2 days ago

              I would feel like wading through sewer bare footed if I had all javascript enabled by default

              • joshchandra@midwest.social
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                4 hours ago

                omg, I’m using NoScript now and my eyes have been opened; I can’t ever go back!! Thanks for the analogy; that was a much-needed, jolting wake-up call.

                • reksas@sopuli.xyz
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                  3 hours ago

                  I also use ublock origin on top of it, that way its a little safer to test which sites to allow. Anything blocked on ublock origin is definitely something you dont need to run the website and if it is then its likely not worth using that website anyway.

            • Telorand@reddthat.com
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              2 days ago

              I run a whitelist. I’d rather be more private than know what to blacklist (and there’s often a lot of extra JavaScript that gets called, mostly for tracking).

              It’s not that tedious. You just add as you use the internet. Refresh the page when you’ve whitelisted.

              • joshchandra@midwest.social
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                2 days ago

                there’s often a lot of extra JavaScript that gets called, mostly for tracking

                Do you mean that your tool (whatever you use) can selectively block some JS while admitting others on one website?

                • Telorand@reddthat.com
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                  2 days ago

                  Yes! NoScript is my tool of choice.

                  It can sometimes be annoying to have to whitelist things, but after seeing that when I allow the main domain (and maybe their CDN) through the filter, and ten more domains will try to do whatever it is they do—Google Tags and Analytics, some data broker, some cookie tracker, etc.—I’m willing to take that extra step just to keep all these companies from snarfing up my data.

                  A little annoyance is a small price to pay, in my mind.

                  • joshchandra@midwest.social
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                    2 days ago

                    Incredible, I had no idea that this was a thing. Is there any tutorial out there that you recommend to figure this stuff out? Or may I ask you questions if need be? I wanna start doing this, too!

                    Come to think of it, is it possible for you to export settings if you wouldn’t mind others (especially those who may not be as savvy) riding off of your work? Haha, that could be interesting.

      • joshchandra@midwest.social
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        2 days ago

        It’s crazy that you’re being downvoted. I guess they avoid The Atlantic, etc. as well, despite the helpful info in such articles.