• NaN@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 year ago

        $1,000 to a campaign in 2008. A majority of Californians voted that way, btw. Good chance many of those millions of voters (and campaign donators) make your tech.

        He’s done other things like his covid noise, continuing to use that one 15 years later shouldn’t sway many.

        • _MusicJunkie@beehaw.org
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          1 year ago

          No JavaScript or ads. (…) Prevents Wikipedia getting your IP address.

          Wikipedia is light on JavaScript and has never had ads. You prevent Wikipedia from getting your IP address but instead reveal it to some random third party, combined with letting them know everything you look up.

          What the hell is the point of this. All this does it confuse people and decrease privacy.

          • macallik@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            This is going increasingly off topic.

            1. Yes wikipedia does have ads every time they fundraise
            2. I use libredirect to complete privacy-focused searches across various front-ends, from YouTube to Reddit to Wikipedia, and my searches are distributed across various instances, so no, a single random third party is not getting all of my searches.
            3. 'The point' is to share an article on the guy who owns Brave. I've provided additional context about wikiless as requested, but if you need more context moving forward, please do a google search.
            • alfonsojon@beehaw.org
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              1 year ago

              They have ads to fundraise. Wikipedia is one of the greatest archives of knowledge in history. Their clients and website are open source powered by MediaWiki. Of all the sites to use a privacy friendly frontend for, I'd have Wikipedia at the very bottom.