

The git repo calls it a demo. The website calls it a prototype. The EU Commission calls it “ready”.
But they also said it “Works on any device” and “Highest privacy standards in the world” so I guess we can’t trust what EU Commission says.


The git repo calls it a demo. The website calls it a prototype. The EU Commission calls it “ready”.
But they also said it “Works on any device” and “Highest privacy standards in the world” so I guess we can’t trust what EU Commission says.


The specification has been worked on for at least a year going by the git repo. The (android) app is a fork of the EUID Wallet app I think which is at least three years old


You need a million over the course a year to bring it to the EU Parliament. They did 1.1 million in four months, which I think is the fastest of any EU Citizens Initiative so far.
More would be nice of course.


The beginning is cut off on the youtube version, though I guess it’s nothing too important. The EU Parliament website has the full version including original & (human) translated audio in a bunch of languages instead of just English though: https://link.europa.eu/4MYMbV


The beginning is cut off on the youtube version. The EU Parliament website has the full version including original & translated audio in a bunch of languages instead of just English: https://link.europa.eu/4MYMbV


It’s not an entire OS, just an app that you can use to read ebooks with lots of features.


“A Song of Ice and Fire” if you can accept that the last books will never be written


Along with what the others said, ours also served as a ticket for all regional public transport. Pretty sure that’s common in Europe at least


uBlock origin blocks it from even downloading, so it can’t even try to run


I would much prefer a digital euro based on GNU Taler, but I guess Wero might at least be better than the status quo
Bypasses aliases and uses the original command


Yes, and PostmarketOS isn’t even Android


Cigarettes I think?
Between roughly 23 and 25 hours, also depends on time zone and when the day is


It’s very unlikely that a galaxy collision would meaningfully affect anything for us except our view of the night sky (over millions of years).


The path is part of the http protocol. Most firewalls only parse the first couple layers (ethernet->ip->tcp/udp), not http as well, unless they do deep package inspection. Idk if openwrt/banip has functionality like that.
It might be easier (and more performant if the firewall has weak hardware) to just allow tcp port 80 and let your reverse proxy do the filtering for that, since it (usually) needs to parse the http anyways.
Do those apps not have separate car/bicycle modes? Osmand does
If they do and the paths are still wrong you might need to tag them correctly on OpenStreetMap.