Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-26 Thread onpon4

I've decided to immortalize and expand on this on my website:

http://onpon4.github.io/articles/libre-games.html


Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-26 Thread web_accounts

F-Droid have some fun game like Pixel Dungeon: pixeldungeon.watabou.ru
in any case, Yalp store (in F-Droid) let you install and use programs from  
the appstore without gmail account and gives you the .apk file :D


Remember to use only the programs that let you not get trapped in the world  
while using Free Sotfware.


Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-26 Thread Ignacio Agulló

 Thanks a lot for the list onpon.  I knew only one fourth of that
games (that addictive Armagetron Advanced!) and am on the process of
installing the rest.

-- 
Ignacio Agulló · agu...@ati.es



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Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-26 Thread greatgnu
The only thing one should need on their computer is ioquake3 (with the  
proprietary artwork, yep, that's right) for the multiplayer and spearmint for  
the fake multiplayer (bots). :P


https://ioquake3.org/
https://clover.moe/spearmint/

See you on the STATIC VOID server. I am the one that constantly frags ur ass  
\o/


Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-25 Thread onpon4
That's what I tried with my younger brothers. It didn't work. As soon as my  
mom got them laptops (which ran Windows), they abandoned all of it.


See, the problem is that my oldest brother was pushing the proprietary games  
he liked, and they liked those games too, much more than they liked any libre  
game they had ever played. And who can blame them? Really, how many great  
libre games can you think of? Tux Typing is great for learning how to type,  
and I think some of the games we have are great, but a lot of them just feel  
like poor-man's versions of proprietary games (e.g. Minetest, SuperTux,  
SuperTuxKart, Freeciv... the list goes on).


This might seem pessimistic, but I don't think, given the current ecosystem,  
we are ever going to get children to stick to libre software. We need tons  
more great libre games. Not crappy educational activities, real games, which  
don't just feel like clones of better proprietary games. More games like  
these:


* MegaGlest
* Warzone 2100
* Jump'n'Bump
* Adanaxis
* Alex the Allegator 4
* Armagetron Advanced
* Battle for Wesnoth
* Project: Starfighter
* Criticalmass
* FreeDink
* Dopewars
* Extreme Tux Racer
* Torus Trooper
* Tumiki Fighters
* Garden of Coloured Lights
* Globulation 2
* Gunroar
* Holotz Castle
* Konquest
* Kobo Deluxe
* Meritous
* MirrorMagic
* Xonotic
* One Is Enough
* OpenClonk
* Overgod
* Powermanga
* Ri-li
* NetHack
* Endgame: Singularity
* SnowballZ
* Teeworlds
* The Mana World

That's the list I came up with scrolling through the "Games" section on  
Trisquel. All of these games are fantastic; by all means, introduce these to  
your kids! But we need more of them, and we need less of the lame clones that  
just leave players wanting the game that inspired them. (Note: clones are  
okay if they're better. That's the key. That's why I've listed Criticalmass  
and Armagetron Advanced. Funny story: Armagetron Advanced was one of my  
brothers' favorite games.)


Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-25 Thread fbits

>I have never tried Trisquel Sugar TOAST

>https://trisquel.info/en/download

>but my understanding is that its desktop environment is intended to be  
healthy for children

>to interface with.

I installed Sugar on Debian for a 5 year old once and it was a terrible  
experience. Terrible for me installing the games and apps and maintaining the  
system (many of them wouldn't install and I could not find an easy way to  
debug). The interface was very clunky and counter intuitive, if I remember  
correctly the mouse pointer was oversized and difficult to achieve any kind  
of precision. It has a very interesting community component, but it is  
useless if there's nobody else using Sugar in the community. The 5 year old  
disliked it and was very frustrated trying to navigate the interface.


I removed it and installed Xfce, then downloaded all the apps and games and  
placed nice looking icons on the desktop (I forget which programs exactly,  
Tux Paint, some that have  many games inside them, a Mr. Potato app, a note  
taking app (I think Leafpad). Tux Paint was very successful. Some touch  
typing learning programs were quite fun for the 5 year old too, especially  
the single letter typing challenges and the levels that dealt with  
familiarizing oneself with the keyboard.


Then the kid's parents gave her an old Android tablet full of games featuring  
the favorite Disney characters and other culture industry crap and the kid  
never used the laptop again. In this case the op is also the parent, so the  
story may have a happier ending.


Peer pressure at school can also make it tough. On the one hand I would not  
like my son/daughter to grow up manipulated by all the consumer crap (I find  
the Disney princesses ideology particularly pernicious), on the other hand I  
would not like my son/daughter to grow up feeling left out. Tough to find a  
like-minded community, though perhaps possible.


Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-24 Thread ar018
Hard restrictions at that age might subliminally push her in the opposite  
direction. Instead, I would suggest spoiling her for choice of FOSS games.


I.e. drowning her in FOSS choice of programs, maybe along a couple of  
proprietary programs that she "must have".


CSS programs will suffer from graphics and will be slow, anyway, and will  
hopefully become boring for her when contrasted to rich and wisely selected  
(for her age) FOSS games portfolio on her phone. IOW, make the floor a bit  
"tilted" towards FOSS, and let her have free reign.


Hopefully she will gradually and willingly switch from proprietary programs  
to FOSS ones, all by herself.


Being spoiled with alternatives is a better way than going cold turkey, if  
you ask me.


Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-24 Thread onpon4
Addendum: should have been a reply to the post above, not this one. Sorry  
about that.


Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-24 Thread onpon4
Regarding her friends, it's worth noting that F-Droid includes a feature that  
allows setting up your device as a localized repo for other F-Droid users. So  
she can share the games she has with her friends that way. She might also be  
able to get the games her friends play off of them this way too, though I'm  
not entirely sure.


While I'd suggest allowing her to do what she wants, including installing  
proprietary software if she wants to, I would not recommend assisting her in  
doing so.


Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-24 Thread onpon4
You're right, sugar is terrible for you, but we are naturally inclined to  
like it, regardless. In fact all energy gets converted to sugar (glucose), so  
it's not inherently evil. The problem is consuming it in excess, without the  
fiber that typically accompanies it in fruit.


Now, if it was called "candy" or something like that, then I would be more  
inclined to agree with you. But sugar itself is not necessarily evil. The  
intention behind the name is probably all the positive emotions we naturally  
associate with sweet-tasting foods.


Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-24 Thread onpon4
> How would using a legally downloaded program on a legally purchased device  
infringe copyright?


Because you're making copies and distributing them to someone else (your  
daughter). Her being your daughter does not change anything, and neither does  
the fact that you're using a physical storage medium to do the job instead of  
the Internet.


Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-24 Thread Mason Hock
> Surely, they (or any reasonable person, for that matter) don't
> think that sugar is beneficial for children

I think that most people know that sugar is not particularly healthy and would 
not advise consuming it to excess. However, I think that most of them do not 
realize that it is more toxic than that, that it is addictive in a literal 
sense, or that a massive industry uses it to exploit people. You are right that 
it is similar to malicious computer interfaces in this way, and that it is an 
ironic name for the project.

However,

> from a ideological point of view (despite their stated aims),
> in my opinion, is flawed.

I think this is an overstatement. I don't know why they chose the name Sugar, 
but as far as I know it has nothing to do with advocating the consumption of 
sugar. A poorly chosen name does not undermine the value of their work. I'm 
glad to see someone reflecting on what makes a healthy interface. I am 
concerned that Replicant, Diaspora, and other free replacements for addictive 
proprietary software unintentionally implement some of the same addictive 
antifeatures in trying to recreate the functionality of the software they 
replace. Freedom 3 allows these antifeatures to be removed, but the first step 
in removing them is identifying them, and this is often nontrivial.


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Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-24 Thread sophoclestechnologies
Surely, they (or any reasonable person, for that matter) don't think that  
sugar is beneficial for children, so their work, at least from a ideological  
point of view (despite their stated aims), in my opinion, is flawed.


Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-24 Thread Mason Hock
> The
> irony is striking.

Indeed. Hopefully the developers know more about HCI than dietetics.


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Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-24 Thread dhood
What you could do is use an apk downloader to remove the file from Google  
Play and then side load it on the Replicant device. Now, depending on the  
phone the app might not work due to the many limitations of Replicant, but  
you won't know until you try it.


An example:  
https://lifehacker.com/apk-downloads-lets-you-pull-apk-files-directly-from-goo-1456775931


In order to keep those sideloaded apps updated see:  
https://android.gadgethacks.com/how-to/get-easy-updates-sideloaded-android-apps-0174291/


The more straight forward solution is to work with your child to teach them  
about the dangers of software and why software freedom is important. Kids are  
a lot smarter than people give them credit for. The other point is if free  
software is a value of yours that you want to instill in them you shouldn't  
buy them compromised systems in the first place so that don't grow attached  
to their stickiness. That might be unpopular with your kid, but parenting  
isn't a popularity contest as I am sure you already know.


Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-24 Thread sophoclestechnologies
Why is a desktop environment seemingly intended to be healthy for children to  
interface with named after such a poisonous (due, among other reasons, to its  
addictive characteristics) substance? The irony is striking.


Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-24 Thread Mason Hock
I dread the thought of trying to raise children for this reason. Proprietary 
software intended for children is especially predatory, and it must be hard to 
protect them from it when it is how they socialize with their friends.

> She mainly uses games (e.g. tocoboco's and lego) and music (i.e.
> spotify), which are not available outside Google Play (afaik).

These programs are not included in the F-Droid repository because they are 
proprietary. If you want your daughter to use a Replicant phone, you probably 
already understand that proprietary software allows the developer to mistreat 
the user. When it comes it mobile programs, particularly those used by 
children, this mistreatment often includes getting the user addicted to the 
software through manipulation of dopemine levels and other tactics.

http://www.scientificrevenue.com/

https://usedopamine.com/

I am unfamiliar with the games you mention, but mobile games intended for 
children are often predatory, and Spotify is certainly not a good program for 
anyone to use.

> I suppose there will be issues with graphics

Probably..

> some apps might
> require connection to the internet (I will not allow those).

I don't know about the games, but Spotify will surely require a connection to 
the internet.

> Would it be feasible to
> 
> 1: install games and/or music apps on an unsafe device (i.e. with
> google play installed)
> 2: extract the .apk
> 3: install the app on a replicated device?

Maybe, but as others have pointed out here, this would probably require you to 
bypass DRM, which is illegal. DRM imposes restrictions beyond those of 
copyright law. It also will not solve the problem that your daughter depends on 
proprietary software for entertainment, and perhaps to socialize. I can see how 
this would be a difficult problem to solve, and I can't imagine what it's like 
to have the responsibilites of being a parent. I will make some suggestions, 
but I hope it is clear that I am not telling you what to do and that I 
understand that you are a parent and I have no idea what that is like.

It might help to introduce your daughter to games that are free software and do 
not connect to a server. They do not necessarily have to be mobile games. In 
fact, it might be a good idea for her to use a desktop computer instead of a 
phone for as much of her computing as possible. The observation that phones are 
distacting and addicting is hardly an original thought, but this issue is 
actually more serious than this. It is not an unintended side-effect of an 
otherwise useful tool. Phones are designed that way on purpose, and as the 
technology becomes more sophisticated the problem will get worse.

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/oct/05/smartphone-addiction-silicon-valley-dystopia

Does your daugher have a desktop computer? Some might consider the age of five 
to be too early for a child to start using a computer, but if she has a phone 
then she is already using a computer, and a desktop computer might be 
healthier. I have on-and-off worked as a substitute teacher for preschool- 
through elementary-aged students, and I've seen students your daughter's age 
use both desktop computers and iBads. A difference is that desktop programs are 
generally intended to be used with a keyboard, while mobile programs attempt to 
restrict the use of language. I can see how this would make a phone easier to 
pick up for a child still learning to read, but children seem to enjoy using 
desktop computers anyway. I have never tried Trisquel Sugar TOAST

https://trisquel.info/en/download

but my understanding is that its desktop environment is intended to be healthy 
for children to interface with.

http://wiki.sugarlabs.org/go/What_is_Sugar%3F

I expect that a possible challenge is that if your daughter may be resistant to 
no longer using the proprietary software she is used to. A solution may be to 
instead introduce free software that might replace it and try to get her 
excited about the free software. I would expect that there are more libre games 
for desktop than for mobile. One of the other posters in this thread, onpon4, 
is a game developer, so in addition to the games she creates she may be able to 
recommend some. I don't know as much about it.

As for music, Spotify has some alluring conveniences, such as tracks being 
automatically selected and streamed without the need for decisions. However, 
there are also disadvantages to this. The idea of a favorite album, maybe even 
a favorite artist, is lost as the paradigm of a musical work is replaced with 
that of "content" in many small pieces used to fill time. This is not ideal for 
young chilren, for whom a normal part of their development is becoming fixated 
on certain music, films, and stories and experiencing them repeatedly. Your 
daughter may enjoy having CDs and a CD player (or playlists on a desktop 
computer) of her favorite music that can be played back as a continous and 
repeatable 

Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-24 Thread tomlukeywood
"How would using a legally downloaded program on a legally purchased device  
infringe copyright?"

Many of these applications forbid copying.

also in some country’s circumventing digital restrictions is against the  
law.

(https://www.defectivebydesign.org/what_is_drm_digital_restrictions_management)


Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-24 Thread tomlukeywood

"Would it be feasible to

1: install games and/or music apps on an unsafe device (i.e. with google play  
installed)

2: extract the .apk
3: install the app on a replicated device?"

it would be, but you i imagine most phones will include drm to try and stop  
you from doing this.


also some games will not run correctly or be too slow on Replicant due to the  
lack of a fast replacement to the proprietary graphics drivers at the moment.


you can find a list of phones and their levels of support here:
https://redmine.replicant.us/projects/replicant/wiki/ReplicantStatus
and recommended phones here:  
https://www.replicant.us/freedom-privacy-security-issues.php#recommendations


I have Samsung Galaxy S2 running replicant and everything is quiet responsive  
and it can run some 2d games well but if i give it a more graphically  
intensive application like Minetest

it rely struggles.

I would reccomend trying and introduce your daughter to some of the games on  
f-droid F-droid (Replicant's application center).


this has the added advantage of avoiding proprietary software as well.


Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-24 Thread jbahn
You said "tocoboco's and lego", but I don't know what kinds of games those  
are


me too! It is kind of crap, but however daddy's determination on freedom and  
openness, these games hayatteimasu (sorry, no anthy on this box yet) - are  
popular among her friends.


How would using a legally downloaded program on a legally purchased device  
infringe copyright?






Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-24 Thread enduzzer

I think it’s Toca Boca.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toca_Boca


Re: [Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-24 Thread onpon4
I'm not sure, but assuming that it is possible, it would be copyright  
infringement to my knowledge. (IANAL)


Perhaps it would be better to introduce her to what F-Droid offers. What  
sorts of games does she play? You said "tocoboco's and lego", but I don't  
know what kinds of games those are.


[Trisquel-users] Google Play and childrens' privacy

2018-02-24 Thread jbahn
I have also posted this at the replicant forum but I suppose someone here  
might have an answer:


I would like my 5 year old daughter to use a replicanted device but face some  
crucial challenges.


She mainly uses games (e.g. tocoboco's and lego) and music (i.e. spotify),  
which are not available outside Google Play (afaik).


I suppose there will be issues with graphics and some apps might require  
connection to the internet (I will not allow those).


Would it be feasible to

1: install games and/or music apps on an unsafe device (i.e. with google play  
installed)

2: extract the .apk
3: install the app on a replicated device?

I consider to use either an S3 4G/i9305 or Tab 2/p3110 disconected from  
networks.