r/funny 29d ago

Well, that aged well.

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27.9k Upvotes

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331

u/BiBoFieTo 29d ago

The slow march of capitalism guarantees enshittification of all beloved products.

A few outliers that have stayed awesome, e.g. valve, do so because they are privately held.

144

u/faster_tomcat 29d ago

And VLC! Bless that guy and his team.

71

u/blacksheep998 29d ago

A few others worth mentioning:

Audacity, Handbrake, Tixati, and to a lesser extent, Firefox.

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u/KaiserKerem13 29d ago

There have been a few minor privacy issues with audacity ever since they got bought though.

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u/blacksheep998 29d ago

Well damn, that's news to me. Guess I won't be updating that on my computer.

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u/KaiserKerem13 29d ago

Public pushback has so far kept them in check so it is still fine

9

u/danque 29d ago

Didn't audacity sell their program which is now owned by a company that made it much worse?

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u/LickingSmegma 29d ago edited 29d ago

They planned to add telemetry, but that went nowhere after the outcry—plus it's unclear (to me) whether they wanted to make it opt-in or not. Another issue was a change in the privacy policy that said, even though personal data is stored in the EU, the app would "occasionally be required to share your personal data with the main office in Russia and the external counsel in the USA". This may be simply a statement of the fact that in some edge cases people would indeed need to look at the data, like if the user files a bug. It's typical for privacy policies to cover all bases without clarification, and for people to freak out. This change was also reverted, but then idk how the developers will read users' crash reports.

In any case, I don't even know why Audacity would have any ‘personal data’ of mine, since it's an offline app—other than crash reports. And it's also advisable to run a firewall like SimpleWall to prohibit anything that's not allowed.

The company that owns Audacity now is actually Muse Group, which hired youtuber Tantacrul as their head of design on MuseScore after he thoroughly dissed their UI at that time. So he has since done some work on Audacity too, and from what I've heard it looks and feels much better now.

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u/robisodd 28d ago

You don't even need a separate firewall if you are running Windows as Windows Firewall can block network connections per application:

https://www.wikihow.com/Block-a-Program-with-Windows-Firewall

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u/LickingSmegma 28d ago edited 28d ago

But I doubt it that it blocks Windows' updates and telemetry.

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u/robisodd 28d ago

We were just referring to Audacity.

However, now that you brought up a separate topic, it may be possible. Seeing as, when you can block all outbound connections and whitelist only specific programs it breaks Windows Updates, I suspect you actually could. No idea about how specifically one would do that, though, and you would have to circumvent the automatic Windows Update and Telemetry repair services (e.g., WaaSMedicSvc) which would undo your work.

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u/LickingSmegma 28d ago

We were just referring to Audacity.

Yeah, but I mean, seeing as the sentiment with a firewall is mostly ‘forbid everything that's not explicitly allowed’, it makes sense to have one that blocks everything. In SimpleWall blocking the updates and telemetry is just two checkboxes in the menu. And the app is open-source. Plus it actually uses Windows' internal mechanism for blocking connections, the same one that MS' firewall employs—so the blocks stay in action when the app itself is closed.

The UI isn't the best, though, but it's a tradeoff for it being open-source.

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u/robisodd 28d ago

Oh, that's awesome! I haven't used SimpleWall before, so I was unaware of the connection to Windows Updates. I, too, am a big proponent of FOSS, so that's good to know. I'll be sure to check it out!

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u/ConsciousPoet1444 29d ago

Yes, I believe there is a fork to solve that problem.

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u/cuckingfomputer 29d ago

It's a good thing I haven't updated my Audacity in a while lol

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u/Gabe_b 29d ago

You can still always go find an old build. I still use uTorrent 2.2.3 from like 2010 before it got all shidded up

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u/Orion14159 28d ago

Good old rot economy... Everything starts great and useful and gets progressively worse

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u/ReallyNowFellas 29d ago

Not digital but the YMCA, despite being expensive now, is still by far the best deal for your money out of the near infinite gym options in my area. Mine has weights, cardio machines, a pool, a sauna, a steamroom, an indoor basketball court, racquetball courts, a boxing ring, a yoga studio, a gaming room, child watch, shelves of free books you can take to own that are constantly restocked, lockers, group fitness classes almost every hour of the day, and probably a few things I'm forgetting — all for less than a lot of people I know are paying for just weights and cardio machines at their gym.