Spyke
buyeuropean·Buy Europeanbyooli3

A guide for change

from [email protected]

Details:

    Site - https://purchasewithpurpose.eu/
    Code - https://codeberg.org/purchase-with-purpose/pwp-website
    Community - https://lemmy.world/c/PurchaseWithPurpose

Every time I post these guides, there is always feedback on things that can improve, or I got wrong. Please do share, as it is the best way for these to evolve!
View original on sopuli.xyz
lemmy.world

The companies below have proven to be reputable and worth supporting.

Spotify

Pays artists $0.0003 per play

Shows ICE ads

Says something about see deep dive for disclaimer, but I don’t see a link in the post body. But interested to see what’s on there.

Edit: found the link

Warning

They pay significantly less royalties, promote AI music, and platform podcasters who spread misinformation - context: https://t.ly/spotify-history. They do offer a superior service, but some people choose not to support them for these reasons.

Yeah so, that doesn’t align with “reputable” and “worth supporting”.

75

Apple Music is actually better than Spotify, which deserves to sit on the left too along with the American options (no, I wouldn't move Apple Music to the right)

15
lemmy.world

Unless someone ruins tidal by commenting below, I love tidal.

They pay their artists more

6
Alaknárreply
sopuli.xyz

Tidal is great, and their "share with anyone" feature is just flat out 12/10, but I recently moved to Qobuz (French) because they pay the artists around 4 times more than Tidal does. And they're European.

18

I appreciate the share with anyone feature as well. I have a few friendships that are largely based on testing cool songs back and forth. This way the only inconvenience is me getting inbound Spotify links.

2
AndyMFKreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Yeah I've been looking to get off Spotify for a while now. Was shocked to see it recommended. It's a shame tidal removed their "connect" feature, it would have made it so easy

5
Alaknárreply
sopuli.xyz

Oh, how I WISH Qobuz gets the same excellent feature as Tidal has - when you share a link to an artist/album/track from Tidal, and someone else clicks it, two things can happen:

  1. If they have Tidal, it will just open the artist/album/track in the app.
  2. If they don't have Tidal, it will open a Tidal-hosted page with links to the shared content on YouTube, Apple Music, Spotify, and a couple of other streaming services.

It just magically solves all the issues with people not wanting to switch because they like sharing their music.

4
lemmy.world

I also found Tidal had the edge in user experience. I'm wondering how Deezer competes, as that is the next one for me to try.

3
cannedtunareply
lemmy.world

People increasingly want their voices heard and are taking action by choosing the companies they support.

These can be due to privacy concerns, environmental reasons, boycotting US companies, or other causes.

Doesn’t the premise imply that Spotify should be in the left column instead then?

The service being “superior” or convenient is counter to the argument.

4
feddit.it

I would add Librewolf in the browsers and Searx in the search engines.

Honestly if you have to put american things in the change columns then swap spotify and youtube music, spotify is just soo bad

35
TheSyndZreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Isnt it just a Firefox "fork" with all already available privacy options on ? Is it better than Firefox arkenfox.js ?

2

arkenfox.js

I believe it is on a similar level, but don't quote me on that. They are both featured by privacytools and privacyguides. I'll look to add arkenfox as that was missed.

1

We don't in fact there are many excellent Canadian options highlighted. And I even had a Canadian version :)

2

I decided to highlight rather than remove, so people can see how it compares to their US counterparts. It is also partially due to the effort required to maintain another full version. The most significant driver for this is to encourage people to move away from Big Tech, and a secondary driver is to move to EU-based tools.

2
ricecakereply
sh.itjust.works

Why? The US is where a lot of technology innovation was directed for a lot of the things being discussed here, so it's kinda limiting to leave them off. Not every US company is bad.
In the os category, it honestly feels odd that they're going by the distro location, when every alternative they list is based on Linux, which is just as American as firefox.

-1
piefed.social

I got to the bottom of the image and Lemmy and Piefed not even on there, ha wtf. I’d add Migadu for email and Kagi for search, both very good value.

16

Kagi is there for search - will look at Magidu.

P.S. Kagi is US-based, but I personally use them.

1
Saapasreply
piefed.zip

Vivaldi mail requires you to be an "active community member" in the Vivaldi community 

Tuta and Proton are a no-go for me for free tier (or at all) allowing me to use third party software for their email. I like to use Thunderbird and Vivaldi's email client to combine my inboxes. Unfortunately that doesn't work with Proton and Tuta.

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arsCynicreply
piefed.social

Vivaldi mail requires you to be an “active community member” in the Vivaldi community

Shit, didn't know. Thanks for pointing that out.

5

I recently got into Vivaldy myself and was bummed to find that out

2

i don't use vivaldi mail (aside from the mail client in vivaldi) since i use my own domain but wouldn't just using social.vivialdi.net count for that? if you're using mastodon anyway, at least...

1

Why is there no section for alternatives to reddit? We should really push more people into the fediverse.

12
lemmy.zip

Dude, where has libro.fm been?! That's the type of thing I have been looking for recently. DRM free downloads and a portion of sales supporting a local store.

10

One of my favourite finds! Their apps are also fantastic... and an obligatory fuck Audible.

2
CubitOomreply
infosec.pub

Hmm...maybe a deeper dive into each of the categories would be better

3

The guide doesn't say what greyed out means. I thought it was for american companies but there are canadian, australian, and eu things greyed out too.

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Alaknárreply
sopuli.xyz

It's not really a mistake with Vivaldi - sure, it's an EU-based company making an EU-based browser, but they are using Chromium, which is majority controlled by Google.

4

That is a big part why Firefox and Firefox based browsers are so heavily favoured on the website.

3
lemmy.world

Thanks @[email protected] for sharing my guide. Below is the text that followed the original.

I shared a version of this guide earlier this year, but felt a website was needed to unpack the different options fully. So after an unreasonable number of hours, I put together the necessary data and website.

I hope this is digestible enough for the average person to help those looking to take that first step, or for people who are equally passionate and want to get their friends or family involved.

Details:

Every time I post these guides, there is always feedback on things that can improve, or I got wrong. Please do share, as it is the best way for these to evolve!

I see there are several comments! I'll go through it now and respond.

8

thanks for the guide. Hopefully it will channel millions from greedy business to more sensible companies

2
lemmy.world

Okay, one questian. What about mega.io? I never see anyone talking about them, neither negatively or positively. Are they ok for folk around here, non-foss aside?

6
leminal.space

Isn't that the descendant of Megaupload?
The pricing looks good to me... and also the scrolling animation on their webpage.

3

Eyup, it is. I like the plan I have with them, just curious of public opinion...which there seems to be none xD

2

Another paid search option is Metager - since Mullvads Leta shut down, i looked for something to switch to and Metager fits the bill: no tracking shit, no ads, a good search with working blacklists, and a configurable cost for the search depending on which indexes you want to use and if you want to use search suggestions. It also taught me to use search shortcuts which i was too lazy to use before - no need to use my tokens when i know i want a wikipedia result.

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piefed.zip

I've recently switched to Vivaldi on Android because Firefox was constantly just janky for me. Now I'm testing it on Linux too, the included email client is a great perk. Too bad it is not fully open source (the UI stuff is proprietary).

5
LeFrogreply
discuss.tchncs.de

Maybe give Iceraven a try. Its a FF Android fork and works with lots of add ons that regular FF android does not offer for some reason.

https://github.com/fork-maintainers/iceraven-browser

Edit:

To be clear, Iceraven does not magically make all add ons usable. But more than regular FF android anyway. From their Readme:

Our goal is to be a close fork of the new Firefox for Android that seeks to provide users with more options, more opportunities to customize (including a broad extension library), and more information about the pages they visit and how their browsers are interacting with those pages.

Notable features include:

  • about:config support
  • The ability to attempt to install a much longer list of add-ons than Mozilla's Fenix version of Firefox accepts. Currently the browser queries this AMO collection Most of them will not work, because they depend on code that Mozilla is still working on writing in android-components, but you may attempt to install them. If you don't see an add-on you want, you can request it.
3
Saapasreply
piefed.zip

I was using the addons I need on my Android Firefox. That part was great. I think most of my issues were more due to the browser engine lacking behind on Android and just feeling janky compared to how smooth and well functioning Chromium based browsers were.

I've tried a few Firefox forks on Android here and there and it was usually a few improvements here and there but overall the experience was similar.

A big recent issue was that Firefox initially loaded for a really long time so doing a quick search was anmoying the first time I launched it. Another issue was how often Firefox was killed in the background. That's partly due to Xiaomi and Android, but for whatever reason even mega bloated chromium browers don't do that. Then bunch of small issues like browser theme not changing with the rest of the system or changing partially that suddenly I had white on white or black on black and I had to kill Firefox to fix the issue. The Android experience has always been janky for me with FF and I've used it for idk as long as I remember it being on Android

3

I am.sorry to hear this. But I feel your pain. A few years ago I had a phone where some apps just where buggy as hell for some reason. There are so many factors contributing to app stability on Android:

  • Android version
  • Possible customisations from the phone manufacturer (bloatware, battery optimisations etc.)
  • Phone hardware, especially working memory and CPU

My current phone has 8 GB working memory and like 40 GB free memory available. It also runs a approx. five year old LineageOS installation, upgraded each year as stated on their website. Currently its LineageOS 22.2 (android 15).

All of this may or may not have great impact on how well FF Android runs.

2

love vivaldi; i found the built in blocker is so much better than ublock, epecially if you edit your sources and add in easylist or the other ublock filters.

i just wish vivaldi android would get extensions.

1
sopuli.xyz

It's a paid app with a free trial, so the benefit is the app. I haven't been using it long. My trial just expired and buying was a no brainer. It's a one time purchase for life, amazing deal so far. Absolutely as slick as Spotify/ tidal and way more customizable UI. I listen to music all day and I've never been this pleased with a setup.

It would be nice if it were open source, maybe when the dev stops wanting to maintain it he'll open it up but he's pretty on top of things right now. Can't really complain.

3

I second this, navidrome\symfonium is a fantastic combination. Navidrome is super easy to set up, and Symfonium is a tinkerer's wet dream

2

I didn't used it but i once saw a video about it, it's great

2

Using it since a year or so. It's great ! Your experience will differ depending on which app you will connect to your instance.

2

Pop_OS I not very good at gaming. Try looking into Gardua Linux and Bazzite as they have more modern packages and faster driver updates.

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XM34reply
feddit.org

Or Manjaro. Arch purist weeaboos hate it, but it's made in Germany, is amazing for gaming and has very fast driver updates. Additionaly, the installation is super simple and fast.

1

In my experience Manjaro only has problems when you use AUR dependencies break because some package hasn't been updated for Manjaro. Other than that, it's perfect for me.

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Meridulareply
europe.pub

Cachy OS is also pretty solid in my experience. But i cant really compare it as i didnt use anything else so far

1

I personally use cachyOS as a daily driver (I got tired of Arch) and it is pretty good performance wise, I just experience a lot of stability problems compared to gardua or bazzite. Still stand by my choice, its an amazing distro.

1

i was a big fan of flickr before they got bought by yahoo and enshittified

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feddit.nu

Does anyone have any experience with Zeitkapsl? I switched to Ente almost a year ago and am generally happy with them, but I'd rather support a European company if they're offering more or less the same solution.

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Lanskereply
lemmy.world

Ive been using zeitkapsl for about 8 months now. Does the trick, very basic functionality, but also really quick and good response from the company if you find a bug or you have questions etc

3

Great! I might give it a try this weekend. They have a free trial after all.

2

For Linux, there's also Arch if you know what are you doing. Manjaro might be a good first step into the Arch ecosystem, even if there are obvious differences, as Manjaro is a different distro, not just a (poorly) preconfigured Arch installation line Omarchy.

3

I like using fedora over Ubuntu, seems more stable and gets updated sooner. Idk about the politics of it though.

3

A few suggestions:

Ente can be cloud hosted or self hosted. The use of cloud connectivity is optional. (Shown correctly on the linked website)

Fedora is another beginner friendly OS, and Bazzite is become a more popular gaming OS.

2

If you include Nextcloud Memories for photo management, why not include it for data storage and web office as well?

2