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Freelock Blog: Use AI to write alt text for your images
Anonymous (not verified)
Tue, 12/10/2024 – 07:00
Hot off the presses! A brand new module, AI Image Alt Text, uses your configured AI engine to write Alt text for your images, based on AI vision models. When you turn this on, you get a “Generate with AI” button next to image fields, where you can easily get AI to analyze your image and come up with alternative text.
With some quick tests, I’m finding it’s describing the image better than I typically do.
The DCR Kids Programming Language Supports Live GUI Updates
Mozilla welcomes new executive team members
I am excited to announce that three exceptional leaders are joining Mozilla to help drive the continued growth of Firefox and increase our systems and infrastructure capabilities. For Firefox, Anthony Enzor-DeMeo will serve as Senior Vice President of Firefox, and Ajit Varma will take on the role of our new Vice President of Firefox Product. […]
The post Mozilla welcomes new executive team members appeared first on The Mozilla Blog.
Verified first-time installs
When F-Droid is installed, it provides a strong, trusted channel to the apps
you want to install. Ideally, F-Droid comes pre-installed on your device,
like with CalyxOS,
LineageOS-for-microG or
DivestOS. Then there is already a verified version
of F-Droid in place, ready to serve you.
We work to make the f-droid.org web site as hardened as
possible to
provide a trustworthy channel for first time installers to download the
F-Droid.apk. For example, we recently rolled out Domain Name System
Security Extensions (DNSSEC) and DNS Certification Authority Authorization
(CAA) protections for the f-droid.org domain name.
If a user already knows about the f-droid.org domain, or a trusted source
tells them that f-droid.org is the right domain, then they will get the
right F-Droid.apk directly from this website. Unfortunately, on the web,
there are lots of ways to trick users into believing they are visiting the
right website. This is usually known as “phishing”. For example,
https://f-droid.org/de/ is the German version of this site, but
https://f-droid.org.de/ is a site controlled by someone else who owns the
org.de domain. Or some unknown owner has controlled
f-droid.cn since 2015. We have not
seen any activity on that domain, but it could still be used to lead users
astray. We regularly buy domains that might be confusing to users to avoid
them being misused. But that alone is unfortunately not enough (note: we’d
love to buy that domain, let us know if you can help us find the owner).
This problem led us to look for other “roots of
trust”. When a user already
knows and trusts a channel, they can use to fetch and verify the
F-Droid.apk. For GNU/Linux distros like Debian, there is a strong trust
anchor provided by the built-in package manager. For other operating
systems, there are add-in package managers, like Homebrew for macOS. So we
made the new fdroid install
command to take advantage of these trust
anchors. If you already trust your package manager, and it ships
fdroidserver v2.3.0 or newer (e.g. apt-get install fdroidserver
), then
you can just install that, run fdroid install
, and get a cryptographically
verified F-Droid.apk to install on your device.
On top of that, fdroid install
will automatically try to download from a
number of built-in mirrors. So installing using fdroid install
could be
more reliable than trying to download F-Droid.apk from this website. For
extra privacy, use fdroid install --privacy-mode
and it will avoid
downloading from https://f-droid.org and instead download from mirrors
that host lots of different kinds of software. Any network observers will
not be able to see which specific software you are downloading from the
mirror. The visible parts of your download traffic will not show that you
are downloading something related to F-Droid. It is important to note that
the operator of that mirror will be able to see that you are downloading
F-Droid.apk.
As of this writing, here are some sources of the required version of
fdroidserver:
- Debian/trixie and Ubuntu/plucky:
apt-get install fdroidserver
- Debian/bookworm-backports:
apt-get install
fdroidserver/bookworm-backports - Homebrew:
brew install fdroidserver
- Python pip:
pip install fdroidserver
- Our Ubuntu
PPA