Sunshine (she/her)
The sunshine on the coast!
🇨🇦🇪🇺
- 119 Posts
- 36 Comments
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.caOPMto
Buy European@feddit.uk•Let's do what Brunei does with Singapore!English
141·6 days agoHow to make it easier for european tourists and investors.
Gotta keep the business private from controlling Republicans and Creepy Mark Carney.
https://www.greenpeace.org/canada/en/story/72808/carneys-bills-explained-c-2-c-12-c-8-and-c-9/
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.cato
Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Loose pig named ‘Breakfast’ is terrorizing residents of a New York neighborhoodEnglish
214·7 days agoRemoved by mod
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.cato
Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Loose pig named ‘Breakfast’ is terrorizing residents of a New York neighborhoodEnglish
214·7 days agoRemoved by mod
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.cato
Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Loose pig named ‘Breakfast’ is terrorizing residents of a New York neighborhoodEnglish
82·7 days agoFind Breakfast a home in a sanctuary!
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.caMto
Buy European@feddit.uk•Europe's Fairphone enters U.S. market tapping right-to-repair demandEnglish
15·8 days agoPlease export a shipment to Canada.
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.caOPMto
Buy European@feddit.uk•Will Canada actually join Eurovision? Not without some challenges, experts sayEnglish
7·8 days agoKick Israel out and get Canada in.
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•YouTube Quietly Erased More Than 700 Videos Documenting Israeli Human Rights ViolationsEnglish
51·9 days agoLooks like the YouTube boycott begins!
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.catoPolitical Memes@lemmy.world•The next 24-48hrs is going to be an entertaining meltdown.English
53·9 days agoThey can stay in the Mississippian trailer park. Leave the rest of the country alone.
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.caOPMto
Buy European@feddit.uk•Why Aldi Is America’s Fastest Growing Grocery StoreEnglish
15·13 days agoGermany actually has standards.
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.caMto
Buy European@feddit.uk•Sweden's Saab considering Canada for its Gripen jet assemblyEnglish
7·15 days agoWhen Saab was trying to sell Ottawa on buying its fighters as a replacement for the CF-18s, it said Gripen jets could be built and maintained in Canada. It lost that contract to U.S. manufacturer Lockheed Martin and its F-35 stealth fighters.
Canadian politicians acting corrupt again feeding the empire that wants to invade them.
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.caOPMto
Buy European@feddit.uk•Proton 2025 autumn/winter roadmapsEnglish
4·15 days agoProton VPN on Linux needs saved profiles and port forwarding.
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.caOPMto
Buy European@feddit.uk•A massive Microsoft Azure outage is taking down Xbox and 365English
5·16 days agoYour comment is very satisfying to read!
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.caOPMto
Buy European@feddit.uk•BYD sees 400% surge in European registrations in Sept, while Tesla slips 10.5%English
1·16 days agoKeep an eye out for Hyundai and Honda.
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.caOPMto
Buy European@feddit.uk•Nvidia's $1 billion stake sends Nokia to decade high on AI hopesEnglish
1·17 days agoThe stock really spiked!
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.cato
Privacy@programming.dev•Carney’s Bills Explained: C-2, C-12, C-8, and C-9English
1·17 days agoBill C-12
Bill C-12 repackages Bill C-2 “leaving intact the measures to block refugee hearings, impose arbitrary retroactive one-year bars, and grant ministers mass immigration status-cancellation powers.” This would allow the government to cancel en masse people’s immigration applications and even cancel visas or permanent residence cards of people already in the country.
On top of this the Bill retains an enforcement-first approach to drug policy, ignoring decades of evidence showing that criminalization and prohibition are driving the current toxic unregulated drug crisis. “Bill C-12’s accelerated scheduling will trigger faster illegal drug market innovations, making Canada’s already-lethal unregulated drug supply even more volatile,” said Nick Boyce of the Canadian Drug Policy Coalition. “This legislation will make the toxic unregulated drug crisis worse while wasting resources that should go to the things we need, like housing, healthcare, and harm reduction.”
Bill C-2
One of the most egregious examples of authoritarian control in Bill C-2 is the ability of peace officers and public officers to make “information demands”. With this power, “persons who provide services to the public” (a ridiculously broad category that includes everyone from bakers to healthcare providers) can be ordered to provide officers with a wide array of information about the people to whom they provide services. Service providers could be required to comply in as little as 24 hours, and they could be prohibited from disclosing the existence of the information demands for as long as a year after the demand is made. If an officer makes an information demand, the service provider has only five days to apply in writing to a judge to revoke or vary that demand. Even then, the service provider can only make that application for review if, before the information must be provided, they gave notice to the officer who made the demand of their intention to make the application for review. These requirements provide service providers with precious little time to challenge these information demands, let alone to comply with them.
To make matters worse, the only requirements to make an information demand is that the officer has “reasonable grounds to suspect” that any offence has been or will be committed under any Act of Parliament, and that the information they demand will assist in the investigation of that offence. “Reasonable grounds to suspect” is an incredibly low burden to meet–much lower than “reasonable grounds to believe”. Officers can thus make information demands even where they have nothing beyond a mere suspicion that an offence might be committed.
Bill C-2 would also introduce the Supporting Authorized Access to Information Act, which allows the government to order electronic service providers to facilitate access to information for “authorized persons” (persons authorized under the Criminal Code or the Canadian Security Intelligence Service Act to access information). The Minister of Public Safety could order an electronic service provider to extract and organize information and provide access to such information to authorized persons; and to install and use any devices that may enable an authorized person to access information.The government could thus order electronic service providers to not only provide Canadians’ private information to police and security services, but to install “backdoor” devices that will provide continuing access to such information.
Although electronic service providers are not required to comply with orders if complying would require them to introduce a “systemic vulnerability”, the meaning of “systemic vulnerability” is undefined in the Act and left open to definition in a future regulation. The “systemic vulnerability” exception will thus not likely be an effective protection against invasions of privacy. As a further element of concern, an electronic service provider cannot disclose the information contained in an order, the information on which the Minister of Public Safety relied in making the order, or even the fact that they are subject to an order. If electronic service providers disclose any of that information, they may be required to pay a hefty fine.
Bill C-8
This piece of legislation would give the Minister powers to break encryption security and install backdoors into Canada’s networks for surveillance purposes. This means that the government could surveil all your online activities from banking to personal communications. Canadian privacy and intelligence watchdogs warned in testimony that, if passed, the bill would authorize warrantless seizure of sensitive private information; and collect and share communications, metadata, locational and financial data.
The new provisions in the Bill outlaws the display of certain symbols giving law enforcement and the government broad discretionary power on what those symbols would be. The new provisions would allow police to detain people first, ask questions later during protests and other gatherings, further undermining freedom of assembly and free expression— giving police more discretion overall. It would also include “bubble” laws prohibiting protest in proximity to certain places which are already protected under the law and allow the police to act on the basis of mischief, intimidation, harassment, or threats. Bill C-9’s intimidation and obstruction offences are overly broad, vague, and pose the risk of criminalizing peaceful protests.
According to the ICLMG, the proposed new offences would carry significant penalties, including the threat of jail time, and will result in people who would ordinarily take action to speak out on important social issues refraining from doing so under the fear of being trapped in the dragnet of additional, unclear and broad discretionary powers. If that is not the government’s intent, we urge it to withdraw this bill in favour of approaches that both protect vulnerable communities and ensure the protection of Charter rights and civil liberties in Canada.
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.cato
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Sometimes people like to complain about windows and iOSEnglish
5·19 days agoA danish heritage moment.
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.cato
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Sometimes people like to complain about windows and iOSEnglish
416·19 days agoDon’t give me the solution waaaah!
Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•As Microsoft Forces Users to Ditch Windows 10, It Announces That It’s Also Turning Windows 11 into an AI-Controlled MonstrosityEnglish
30·24 days agoThe malware has been dewormed.
















Using a fairphone with a linux mobile distro would receive limited connectivity moreso than android and it would be difficult to receive official support from the brand. I suppose I will have to wait for the future market expansion.