Hey,
With GraphQL, FQL, and IndexedDB2, we have new tools at our fingertips that allow us to build products that are not only more flexible but also faster. With this week’s Web Development Reading List, we’ll dive a bit deeper into these promising technologies and combine this with thoughts about the openness of the internet, ethical choices, and building inclusive products. So without further ado, let’s get started!
News
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- Matthias Ott points out that it’s about time that we take back control, reclaim our digital future and rebuild the web so that it, finally, becomes a web for everyone. And with growing surveillance and even bigger data consolidation by a few big private players, it’s now up to us to recognize the errors we make and amend our decisions accordingly to create a better web—a web that is more accessible, more private, and more independent.
- Quincy Larson wrote an essay about why the future of the open internet and our way of life is in our hands. By comparing the history of TV, radio, and telephone, he explains why it’s up to us to prevent that the internet goes through the same cycle of commercialization and privatization as the technologies that came before.
Tooling
- Loren Sands-Ramshaw wrote a two-step guide on GraphQL (Part 1, Part 2), a relatively new query language that has better performance and is easier to handle as REST.
Security
- The Chrome team concluded an investigation on the Symantec Root Certificate Authority and now discusses when and how to distrust the entire authority due to having misissued over 30.000 certificates. If the entity is mistrusted, GeoTrust, Thawte, and other certificate authorities will be affected by the decision as well since they’re operated by Symantec.
Privacy
- Whoops, there we go: As expected, the US Senate voted to allow Internet Service Providers to sell customers’ private data to third parties without opt-in consent. What a world we live in, where money seems to be everything that counts.
HTML & SVG
Work & Life
- Alex Castrounis shares why estimating software development tasks by time and time tracking don’t work and how you can still get pretty accurate estimations to calculate the progress and a deadline for a project.
Go beyond…
- It’s interesting to see that a growing number of people now seem to ask themselves how to do good work, and I think it’s because we realize that current developments are so bad that we as individuals think about what we can do to improve our society again. Mike Monteiro is one of those people who care deeply about ethics, now he explains why ethics can’t be a side hustle and why you can’t shuffle yourself out of responsibility if you’re doing a non-ethical job as your main work. It’s true that you have to start somewhere, and doing simple things in your daily life can already help to improve our society, but, in the end, if you’re getting paid for non-ethical work, you’re actively helping and promoting this work. And nothing can make this undone.
Anselm