Bastian Greshake Tzovaras
banner
gedankenstuecke.scholar.social.ap.brid.gy
Bastian Greshake Tzovaras
@gedankenstuecke.scholar.social.ap.brid.gy
Researcher & #Luddite interested in theory & practice of #peerproduction. Loves everything open 💖: #openscience #citizenscience #opensource & […]

[bridged from https://scholar.social/@gedankenstuecke on the fediverse by https://fed.brid.gy/ ]
Reposted by Bastian Greshake Tzovaras
«The tech industry is being taken over by merchants of services, and the Open Source community is starting to depend on them. We've seen this coming, with GitHub being a startup, bought by Microsoft which is now pushing AI. They are the means of production.»

And FLOSS would be doing well to […]
Original post on scholar.social
scholar.social
November 27, 2025 at 1:26 AM
Reposted by Bastian Greshake Tzovaras
americans on bluesky getting into conniptions because someone _dared_ to call them, against their will, _usians_ is a beautiful example of a main character syndrome scaled to the whole nation.
November 26, 2025 at 10:36 PM
«The tech industry is being taken over by merchants of services, and the Open Source community is starting to depend on them. We've seen this coming, with GitHub being a startup, bought by Microsoft which is now pushing AI. They are the means of production.»

And FLOSS would be doing well to […]
Original post on scholar.social
scholar.social
November 27, 2025 at 1:26 AM
«In a world where fascists redefine truth, where surveillance capitalist companies, more powerful than democratically elected leaders, exert control over our desires, do we really want their machines to become part of our thought process?»

I don't care how well your "AI" works - fiona fokus […]
Original post on scholar.social
scholar.social
November 26, 2025 at 8:02 PM
Reposted by Bastian Greshake Tzovaras
OMFG, a German native speaker who was educated in German institutions "wrote" in their cover letter that they speak English fluently and are looking forward to improving their German language abilities through the German classes offered to employees.

Don't use LLMs for cover letters people!
November 25, 2025 at 3:37 PM
So, ACM will not only hold a conference in Dubai in 2026, but there will be a "Prompt Engineering Workshop" as part of the program. In case anyone was still under the illusion that academia isn't just shilling for tech. 😂
November 25, 2025 at 11:24 AM
A good piece into how the polarisation of particularly US social media is due to the incentive programs by the social media companies themselves, and how/why they have no interest in fixing any of this

«The problem is not a lack of transparency, because being “transparent” doesn’t actually […]
Original post on scholar.social
scholar.social
November 24, 2025 at 7:54 PM
In case you missed it, as it was posted on a Friday afternoon: I've written some notes on how to map & survey using @CoMaps & @everydoor when one is trekking without any internet & electricity for a few days!

https://tzovar.as/offline-mapping/

#openstreetmap
Mapping offline with CoMaps and Every Door
For the first half of November, I’ve been in Peru to do some hikes close to Cusco with friends: First, we did a 5 day trek to the Inca site of Choquequirao and back. After a day and a half of rest back in Cusco, we then did the 4-day Inca trail to Machu Picchu as well. Of course, I wanted to use those opportunities to do some surveying and mapping for _OpenStreetMap_ (OSM) along the way as well. But there are (at least) two potential issues when doing so during multi-day hikes into at least somewhat remote areas: Having internet connectivity & managing phone battery levels. To give some context about the locations in question: Similar to Machu Picchu, Choquequirao is tucked away on the side of a mountain, surrounded by forests. But unlike its sister site, there is no way to reach that doesn’t involve hiking 25 km as first descending and then climbing 1,600 meters (That is one way, you then do the same in reverse to get back). Given this geography, there’s very little to no internet connectivity along the way, which makes live-mapping very hard. And while the Inca trail is more touristy, even along it there’s ~2 days where there’s no connectivity. Furthermore, most of the campgrounds one encounters have limited if any electricity to recharge batteries as well. To nevertheless be able to survey and contribute, I used a mix of strategies: Firstly, as I was recording the actual hiking paths with my Garmin _Fenix_ watch, I got GPX tracks of our routes somewhat as a side effect. On a full charge, and with a bit of integrated solar charging, it can record GPS tracks for ~24 hours. And similarly, by just taking holiday snapshots (as well as some more mindful surveying pictures) along the route using my phone, I created some geolocated reference images too. That left the question of how to more directly contribute to OSM, for which I settled for a combination of _CoMaps_ and _Every Door_. _CoMaps_ 1 is mainly a map & navigation app that is based on OSM and is available for iOS & Android. It works with maps that are fully offline after the initial download. This in itself was already super useful: While we had guides for our treks, it was super useful to be able to quickly pull out a map to check what a given mountain peak we were seeing was - and even read the associated offline Wikipedia article. Or being able to check the current or remaining elevation. Beyond looking at OSM data, _CoMaps_ also has a (simple) OSM editor, that allows adding & editing points of interest (POI), as well as leaving notes on OSM. And as _CoMaps_ is an _offline-first_ app, it works well offline too: It will queue your edits & notes and keep them safe until you’re back online, at which point the data is sent over to OSM. While this approach works well for many common POI, _CoMaps_ is by design limited to more common objects, to keep things simple. To be a bit more flexible, I also wanted to use _Every Door_ , which is a more powerful OSM editor designed specifically for surveying. Until recently, it didn’t work super well for pure offline-use, as the background map/satellite layers would not easily cache predictably. Luckily, _Every Door 7.x_ was released in September and has changed this2! This version has two changes that make fully working offline very easily possible: Firstly, one can now optionally work with vector tiles instead of just the previous raster tiles, thanks to the new plugin architecture. The vector tiles are significantly smaller, so it’s more feasible to have them available offline on a phone for larger regions – which comes at the cost of slower map-rendering speeds. Secondly, the 7.x version of _Every Door_ also allows managing its offline-available data. One can now select areas for which both the OSM data itself and the raster/vector tiles (or even satellite images) should be stored offline. Once downloaded, the background layer and OSM data are persistently stored, allowing browsing the corresponding regions in _Every Door_ without any connectivity. Unlike _CoMaps_ , _Every Door_ does not automatically push changes back to OSM, instead it requires actively pressing the _Upload_ -button. This is nice for prolonged offline-use, as one can then submit one larger changeset, which one can even annotate with hashtags. Now that we have ways to collect and edit data offline on the trail, **what about battery life** : Given the assumption that there’s no connectivity during the trek, the biggest battery saving comes from enabling airplane mode to disable the mobile radios. Otherwise the radios would continuously try to find and connect to cell towers, sucking up the battery. Using the phone otherwise for taking pictures and mapping with _CoMaps_ & _Every Door_ , that alone helped bring down the battery use to around ~30-35% of battery capacity in a hiking day. To further minimize battery use, I just switched off my phone in the evening, only turning it back on the next morning. Both _CoMaps_ and _Every Door_ handle a cold restart perfectly fine without losing the already downloaded/queued data. With that, my phone could easily last 2 days, maybe even a bit more. I carried a power bank to top up my phone every two days, as well as recharging my _Garmin_ watch to continue my GPS recordings too. I didn’t have any _battery anxiety_ with this approach, leaving my (20,000 mAh) power bank more than half-full after the 5 days of hiking. Overall, this was my first time trying to do some surveying while hiking in (somewhat) off-the-grid locations that are mostly without internet connectivity and electricity. And I wasn’t sure how well it would work, but it turns out **_CoMaps_ and _Every Door_ handled contributing in that way really well**: Once we came back to a place with stable WiFi, I uploaded all edits via both apps without any issues. And when I arrived back home, I used the GPS Tracks to adjust some paths that I had noticed as being slightly wrong along the way and uploaded some images to Panoramax and Wikimedia Commons. I will definitely continue using this approach for contributing to OSM on my next hikes, and if you plan to go out into nature you can give it a try too, just download the relevant map regions in advance and you’re good to go. Happy hiking! ## References 1. Greshake Tzovaras, B. (2025, May 9). Updates to the ‘Personal API’. Bastian Greshake Tzovaras. https://doi.org/10.59350/8fxh9-3vd91 2. Greshake Tzovaras, B. (2024, August 23). Openly licensed streetview with Panoramax. Bastian Greshake Tzovaras. https://doi.org/10.59350/cjnzq-6cs79 ## Footnotes 1. Since _CoMaps_ has forked from _Organic Maps_ , I’ve been trying to contribute and help out a bit where I can, as it’s one of my favorite OSM-based map tools. ↩ 2. _Every Door_ is generally one of my favorite surveying tools for OSM, I recently was involved in making a small _getting started_ -guide in Spanish for it. ↩
tzovar.as
November 24, 2025 at 3:15 PM
«Students are afraid to fail, and AI presents itself as a savior. But what we learn from history is that progress requires failure. It requires reflection. Students are not just undermining their ability to learn, but to someday lead.»

This is the worst part about the use Gen "AI" in places of […]
Original post on scholar.social
scholar.social
November 22, 2025 at 4:54 PM
«Wer im Exil lebt, ist nicht nur Opfer, sondern auch Spiegel. Seine Existenz erinnert daran, was geschieht, wenn die Politik aufhört, der Menschenwürde zu dienen. Seine Abwesenheit prangert das Land an, das ihn hervorgebracht hat. Jede erzwungene Ausreise, jede Verbannung ist eine moralische […]
Original post on scholar.social
scholar.social
November 22, 2025 at 11:56 AM
Reposted by Bastian Greshake Tzovaras
Based on my experience while trekking in Peru, I've written some notes on how to map & survey with @CoMaps and @everydoor when off the internet & electricity for a few days!

https://tzovar.as/offline-mapping/

#openstreetmap
Mapping offline with CoMaps and Every Door
For the first half of November, I’ve been in Peru to do some hikes close to Cusco with friends: First, we did a 5 day trek to the Inca site of Choquequirao and back. After a day and a half of rest back in Cusco, we then did the 4-day...
tzovar.as
November 21, 2025 at 11:54 AM
Reposted by Bastian Greshake Tzovaras
Wohoo, what feels like ages ago, @dpk, @n0toose & I started a motion to clarify which licenses are compatible with #codeberg's mission. And after our motion for that ToS update had passed at the annual assembly, it is now live!

You can read about that – and many other cool news from @Codeberg – […]
Original post on scholar.social
scholar.social
November 21, 2025 at 11:49 PM
Wohoo, what feels like ages ago, @dpk, @n0toose & I started a motion to clarify which licenses are compatible with #codeberg's mission. And after our motion for that ToS update had passed at the annual assembly, it is now live!

You can read about that – and many other cool news from @Codeberg – […]
Original post on scholar.social
scholar.social
November 21, 2025 at 11:49 PM
This take on the "all modern digital infrastructure" meme reminded me of something 🤔 https://ohai.social/@sushee/115587831612003303

Oh right, the long-term nuclear waste warning ideas of the landscape of thorns. Fitting enough for tech in 2025: "This place is […]

[Original post on scholar.social]
November 21, 2025 at 2:12 PM
Based on my experience while trekking in Peru, I've written some notes on how to map & survey with @CoMaps and @everydoor when off the internet & electricity for a few days!

https://tzovar.as/offline-mapping/

#openstreetmap
Mapping offline with CoMaps and Every Door
For the first half of November, I’ve been in Peru to do some hikes close to Cusco with friends: First, we did a 5 day trek to the Inca site of Choquequirao and back. After a day and a half of rest back in Cusco, we then did the 4-day...
tzovar.as
November 21, 2025 at 11:54 AM
Reposted by Bastian Greshake Tzovaras
I just do not have the time to write anything long-form about this but the ongoing Mozilla AI debacle is really indicative of a very, very troubling aspect of the broader AI debacle, which is that a strong majority of even the *actually* well-intentioned, smart leaders in tech have had their […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
November 21, 2025 at 4:01 AM
Reposted by Bastian Greshake Tzovaras
RE: https://floss.social/@omgubuntu/115583973694128369

Time to fire the Mozilla management or to hard-fork all #mozilla projects.

#aislop
floss.social
November 20, 2025 at 9:08 PM
Reposted by Bastian Greshake Tzovaras
Making some progress with that. Including uploading this Peruvian interpretation of The Last Supper in Machupicchu pueblo, featuring local clothing as well as food that looks like it's corn or quinoa! […]
Original post on scholar.social
scholar.social
November 19, 2025 at 9:20 PM
Germany's chancellor really is doing everything he can to continue his far-right fishing expeditions, this time on the back of Brazil. That'll ultimately probably lead to him paving the way for Nazi Germany 2.0 even more…

El canciller alemán Merz y su paso en falso en Brasil – DW – 19/11/2025 […]
Original post on scholar.social
scholar.social
November 20, 2025 at 1:56 AM
Spent some time today to use my GPS tracks and geo-located images to improve #openstreetmap around the trail to/from Choquequirao.

Next up will be doing the same for the trail to Machu Picchu - and then getting some images from along the way on Wikimedia Commons.
November 18, 2025 at 6:54 PM
A Researcher Made an AI That Completely Breaks the Online Surveys Scientists Rely On: «We can no longer trust that survey responses are coming from real people," Westwood said in a press release. "With survey data tainted by bots, AI can poison the entire knowledge ecosystem.”»

It's not like […]
Original post on scholar.social
scholar.social
November 18, 2025 at 2:22 PM
Have other scholar.social users noticed that things seem a bit sluggish for the past few days? Both API interactions with clients as well as the website seem to time out quite frequently for me, but I'm not sure if that's a me-problem or a general thing.
November 18, 2025 at 11:28 AM
«AI scrapers request commented scripts»

That seems like an interesting additional vector for algorithmic sabotage!

https://cryptography.dog/blog/AI-scrapers-request-commented-scripts/
AI scrapers request commented scripts
A new avenue for identifying greedy, badly-behaved bots
cryptography.dog
November 17, 2025 at 5:45 PM
Made it back home, despite some delayed flights. And these two were obviously extremely happy to have their humans back. 🐶
November 17, 2025 at 4:23 PM
Reposted by Bastian Greshake Tzovaras
Wow, this campaign website against Google's plan to kick out XSLT is a thing of beauty.

https://xslt.rip/
XSLT 安息吧
XSLT RIP (xslt.rip) 15:39  ↑ 112 HN Points
xslt.rip
November 10, 2025 at 3:27 PM