18 points

Another super pointless thing in our life that is only this bad because of IP laws and the multimedia industry.

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7 points

Not quite. Even if copyright didn’t exist, they still would block porn etc. I even encountered a Wi-Fi network where YouTube videos worked except those with content warnings (such as mentions of self-harm). I wonder how that can be done despite HTTPS - maybe the questionable videos have a different domain? I should have investigated the issue more but NewPipe made it seem like the video had been taken down so I just assumed that was the case. (It was at a train station in southern Bavaria, most likely Wangen im Allgäu. I was there only once.)

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0 points

Modern firewalls are man-in-the-middle attacks.

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3 points

Captive portals are effectively MitM but that’s why they only work on HTTP (notice the crossed-out lock icon).

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Yep, should be a different domain. NextDNS can also enforce SafeSearch:

Filter explicit results on all major search engines, including images and videos. This will also block access to search engines not supporting this feature.

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1 point

I mean, you run your own firewall (that’s what I got from the title) amongst I assume other privacy controlling measures (tho it’s really just an assumption) and also wanna use a public network of a goddamn shopping center…

are you really surprised?

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21 points
*

No, I don’t run a firewall. It’s their own firewall that blocks their own landing page where I would see an “accept terms” prompt.

A difference my phone has from a usual setup is that I replaced the http://connectivitycheck.android.com/ ping address with 127.0.0.1 (which never fails so my phone does not complain about “limited” networks). A side effect is that I have to go to http://neverssl.com/ or another HTTP-only page in my browser to show captive portals. This is why the right screenshot is in Firefox, not WebView.

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1 point

Ah, alright. That’s pretty shitty.

Though it’s still not the wisest to use these open wifi networks. Their firewall did a favor tor you IMO. 😄

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5 points

What would be the translation for Kaufland into Czech? Kaufland comes from Germany. Kauf(en) = shop(ping), land = land.

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6 points
*

Země nákupů. That would be Land der Einkäufe but we don’t combine words nearly as much as Germans or Orwellian communists.

Wait, you're from Memmingen?

Anyway, I’ve been to Memmingen and I liked the Satanic upside-down cross atop the Himmelfahrt church!
I stayed in the FMM Hostel self-service airport accomodation in a former hangar or something, it was cheap and shitty as expected. See my other comment here about what also happened to me on public Wi-Fi during that trip at a train station somewhere between Memmingen and Lindau.

Also, I visited the two-story Kaufland in Ravensburg (the lower level is just parking but whatever) We don’t have such a thing here! I stole a giant LCD clock from their e-waste bin and turns out it worked, it’s in my room to this day.

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5 points

Given how cheap mobile data is these days, why use public Wi-Fi anyway?

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18 points

because there is no reception inside a huge store. Speaking from experience.

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5 points
*

The Czech Republic has pretty good coverage, actually. You can get 2G in garages of shopping malls and 4G on pretty much every train. It is uncommon to come across a paved road that has no reception. However, there is a cartel of telecoms and…


Our median wage is comparable to Poland, not Germany!

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I wonder about the data. 2021 was not a long time ago, and €3.55 is just way too high to make sense to me in Slovakia. I’d expect something like €1.50 or €2 instead. And even that just for regular prepaid.

Anyway, in 2021 I was using Swan Mobile (4ka) for €12/month for 300GB. That would make €0.04/GB.
They’re the 4th carrier which is what’s bringing down the price a bit. Unfortunately, even now they still only own a small chunk in 1800MHz, so the speed is low as well as is the coverage.
It’s better now that they have access to 2100MHz and 900MHz from Orange (official FUP 20GB - real FUP is 80GB currently*), but the price also went up to €17/month, so €0.057/GB.

* The FUP was officially 20GB for as long as I’ve used them, but the real limiting was always different. During the 3G Orange access it was throttled after 40GB. Then after 3G shutdown and migration to partial 4G sharing, there was absolutely no limiting for a few months. Then they started to apply it after 80GB.
This however is not optimal. The “national roaming” as they call it is no longer shown as roaming. Instead the device registers into Orange network natively, thus this data usage cannot be controlled.
At least on most devices. I specifically bought a phone that supports manual band selection. This “feature” is never advertised and may disappear with an update (e.g.: Samsung devices some time back), as it is just a leftover testing menu that is generally removed. Especially since in some cases it even let’s you change stuff like IMEI.

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