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Have you been hibernating since january 2025 ? You're living in a dictatorship now, that's why.

> Root had been toying with the 8,000 or so members who signed up for the site by tricking them into conversations with AI chatbots.

> Root set up a website, okstupid.lol, to host a map showing the location of each user, as well as the biography that they used on the dating site and any photos and other details they uploaded.


> Der Postillon is a German website, [...]featuring satirical articles reporting on international, national, and local news in newspaper and TV format.

Finally an ereader that doesnt cost 600$+...but sold out :/

Title should read "I had to switch to eSim [...]"

well yeah, of course esim is shitty, as is everything imposed by big tech monopolies to their users without consulting or caring about what they really want. Did you think they were here for your wellbeing and not the money ?


eSIM is specifically designed to deny user freedom.

They are impossible to transfer from device to device by design, for one. Every single "transfer" has to be approved and signed off by a cellular provider in an online mode. They can deny it at will, or just neglect implementing it, and you can do nothing at all.

It's pretty clear that when GSMA talks of "security", they mean "security of the business models". What does that mean for the users? It means they're getting fucked.


esim.me, 9esim and "sysmocom eUICC for eSIM" are eSIMs in the SIM card form factor that you can load the SIM profiles onto and use them in any device with a SIM card slot (and of course transfer between devices). In my opinion, that's the best of both worlds.


It's good, but they're expensive as fuck for what they are.

The best option would be a software-only eSIM with full transfer support, IMO. But we don't have that, because GSMA says we can't have nice things.


> It's good, but they're expensive as fuck for what they are.

Yep, I remember a time where you could extract the Ki and IMSI from legit SIMs and write that to a bog standard Goldwafer card (which were also used for cable TV hacking) including some SIM emulation software and thereby clone the SIM. That was like 30 years ago and the only thing that changed in SIMs since then is better encryption.


If you had the relevant keys? You wouldn't even need a blank card. You could just make a software emulator and force the smartphone modem to use it.

The obvious issue being: it's pretty hard to acquire raw key material. Most vendors refuse to sell it, and the workarounds are messy.


What would be the use case for that?


What would be the use case of being able to transfer a SIM card from one device to another at will, you mean? What kind of question is that.


I'll post an example for the parent just in case they are honestly confused about use cases. Here is one that happened to me. I had an eSIM on my iPhone. My iPhone broke (screen became somewhat unusable, and the phone was stuck in a restarting loop). It was an older model phone so I checked the repair cost and thought I'd rather buy a new one.

Bought a new phone. Now, to transfer my eSIM from the old phone to the new phone, I needed the carrier to approve. But I was away from my home country and on roaming. So I tried to call them. They needed me to use a verification PIN they would send via SMS on the old phone, to verify the transfer to the new one. Impossible since the old phone is unusable.

Back in the day, I'd have just taken out the sim from the old phone and moved it to the new one. Easy peasy.

The only other option in this case now was to visit one of their stores thousands of miles away. Eventually just ended up doing that when I returned weeks later but during this time I could not access several services due to lack of access to my number plus 2 factor codes being sent there.

Moving a sim from phone to phone was seamless. Now the carrier needs to approve this swap. Even with two working phones sometimes it's a hassle and there will be delays while carriers decide to approve the move. There is a new feature that allows you to transfer eSIMs easily between phones but carriers seem to be holding onto their power in this regard and not every carrier will let their sims move so easily. This possibly requires regulators to step in and solve the issue - make it up to the user to move eSIMs. I would count on the EU to make this easier at some point.

On the plus side, eSIMs are nice to be able to signup and provision them through an app. Helps with travel and roaming. So there's that too.


“I’m across an ocean from any of my network’s stores and need to activate a different phone on my regular network and number right now, on the side of the road, without WiFi or a computer or a different, working phone already on my account” is to me the most obvious case where eSIM is weak. And having been in that situation before eSIMs, it was really easy - remove SIM, put in backup phone, use. Not so much now.


The biggest obstacle with changing traditional SIMs is where to find a paperclip or pin to open the tray. And that’s easy to overcome.


this carrier approval to move esim problem is more generalized on modern “smartphones”. unless you opt in to cloud providers holding your data there is no easy way afaik to migrate your authenticator apps to another phone. and a host of other authentication/authorization data is tied to the device in an opaque way. don’t get me started on apple’s unpredictable model of sending 2fa to some other “trusted” device which means tou never know what tou need to bring with you.


> unless you opt in to cloud providers holding your data there is no easy way afaik to migrate your authenticator apps to another phone.

You could self-host Bitwarden/Vaultwarden, or something like that.

> don’t get me started on apple’s unpredictable model of sending 2fa to some other “trusted” device which means tou never know what tou need to bring with you.

I think they send 2FA to all supported devices on one's Apple account?


i just ran into a situation activating a new device in which apple were trying to send to a device i had forgotten to “properly” remove from that icloud account.

and also another situation in which the 2fa code would flash on the remote device and disappear in a fraction of a second. i eventually captured it with screen recording but every time i did it the code was not accepted.

my conclusion: apple had silently ruled that i would not be allowed to activate using that particular icloud account. no idea why. i tried a different one and things went through ok.

arbitrary power in practice.


Google authenticator lets you move accounts easily using a QR code + phone camera.


But no way to backup to cold storage last time I checked. Took a picture of the QR code with another phone and printed it.


> Took a picture of the QR code with another phone and printed it.

Why? Decode the QR code and store the text however you prefer to store text.


i wish there were a straightforward way to export a file of some sort that i can backup without creating yet another special case to manage.


that’s good to know thanks but creates more special cases to manage if i just want to backup my stuff so i can manually recover when i need to (on lost device say).


Probably one most people never ask, though should be obvious to those on this forum.


If what you say is true, why would Apple ever force a switch to eSIM? I’m now less likely to buy a new iPhone because I don’t want to deal with this eSIM fiasco. It’s to their detriment. If their goal is to sell more phones, they would want to eliminate all friction to switch to a new phone. So what you are saying doesn’t add up.


Less space occupied, more battery, smaller phones.

It wasn't the only reason, but was at least one of the stated reasons for the jack removal.


They also promoted this with the iPhone 17 eSIM-only variant. More space for battery.


Great tool I would have loved back when I watched movies :) Could the same be done for music ?


Or saying playing violent video games makes you violent, which sounds familiar...


It's not clear if the app was removed AND their account terminated, or if the account was terminated, and the app disappeared from the store as a consequence ?

Looks like LocalDevVPN is next then... ?

For those wondering, StikDebug is "An on-device debugger/JIT enabler for iOS versions 17.4+, powered by idevice."


This must be infuriating:

> You spend a lifetime mastering a language, adhering to its formal rules with greater diligence than most native speakers, and for this, a machine built an ocean away calls you a fake.

This is :

> humanity is now defined by the presence of casual errors, American-centric colloquialisms, and a certain informal, conversational rhythm

And once you start noticing the 'threes', it's fun also.


I mean, "to err is human" was written in the 1700s, by the enlightenment era author the essay writer is presumably reading.

Humanity has always been about errors.


JFTC's full 'Mobile Software Competition Act Guidelines' are available here : https://www.jftc.go.jp/file/MSCA_Guidelines_tentative_transl...

Curious to see how Apple and Google are going to circumvent this.


My admittedly amateur reading of this is that while it does promote competition, it also explicitly allows what Apple is pulling in the EU with its signing/review requirements for non-App Store applications. So no need to circumvent, they still retain control over what code is allowed to run on iPhones, albeit subject to restrictions on what reasoning they're allowed to use to refuse to sign an app.


How is it different to what Apple’s done in the EU, with allowing for third party app stores there.


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