>janny deleted the maid thread>mfwMaids were discussing the future of Kurumi MaidCard, and distributed file sharing because Kurumi MaidCard III will have Gnutella or Bittorrent included with it so maids can use it as a distributed VCS.
A nice maid also showed off a card she made with Kurumi I.
>https://desuarchive.org/g/thread/101414958/#q101415191>Wait - you can't actually open it?I can dig up Kurumi I to open it.
>There's going to be a (probably incompatible) MaidCard III anyway.Kurumi III will be able to open Kurumi II cards (but not Kurumi I). Kurumi III has a better compressor and VCS/distribution powers, but at the core is still using the Maid-LZW implementation from Kurumi II.
>Kurumi III Blogpost and NewsletterKurumi III is almost done. I am just trying to decide between adding a Bittorrent or a Gnutella implementation.
Kurumi III is a distributed VCS for maids to share version controlled projects on the internet without hosting anything or agreeing to any TOS, AUP, Privacy Policy, or CoC, or using any centralized service. This protects maids from censorship and coercive TOS models by providing Public Domain code for an alternative platformless system engineered to be incapable of those things.
Nobody should have to enter into a one-sided legal agreement with a multi-billion dollar multinational company that hates you to do basic things like share advanced Mathematics and Computer Science research online. The internet should be a maid cafe where maids go to discuss and work on advanced Mathematics and Computer Science research, not a factory farm for big tech.
Kurumi III can be distributed via 4Chan like Kurumi I and II, but also via itself over Gnutella or Bittorrent. I wanted a more anonymous protocol than Bittorrent, but maids are only posting code and using it as a VCS so Bittorrent is probably fine unless one of you maids has a better suggestion for decentralized communications and software distribution network architecture.