Skip Navigation

InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)F

FoundFootFootage78

@ Tenderizer78 @lemmy.ml

Posts
8
Comments
920
Joined
10 mo. ago

  • I saw someone else did the same thing and IIRC a Chinese one also passed the test.

  • Bose Quietcomfort Ultra with a USB microphone.

  • Australia has some bad tech laws, don't get me wrong, but they're nowhere near on the level of the UK.

  • There's also

    • Cash purchases are private
    • Cash purchases don't incur merchant fees for the retailer
    • Cash/Card purchases don't deliver money to American big tech.
    • You can use GrapheneOS if you get rid of Google Pay.
  • I've never lost my wallet once.

    When my phone got to be about 10 years old the battery was dying any time it got too cold.

  • If you leave your wallet at home, you won't:

    • Have ID.
    • Have cash for when your phone dies.
    • Have a card for when your phone dies.

    There are many reasons to have your wallet with you.

  • In the age of AI, without verifying the identity of people there's no way to really distinguish AI spam. A trusted user under a well-known pseudonym might work, but that requires they build up trust anonymously and as time goes on that'd be harder.

    So basically, the internet is dead without this, and it's dead with it.

  • No. It's developed by the Linux Foundation Europe.

  • But also Rust can’t replace skill.

    Never said it could, just that it gives them a leg up.

  • Qute isn't my kind of browser, so I probably won't be following you to Qute.

    Firefox suites my workflow basically perfectly. Except that it won't let me duplicate a tab with a keyboard shortcut (because tabs freeze quite often).

  • Security and stability are related. They're both about preventing unexpected behaviour.

  • It's unremarkable and has baggage.

    The Servo browser is where it's at. It's written entirely in rust so it has a leg up on stability and security over other browsers. The issue is that they're not really interested in the most important part, which is things like bookmarks and dark mode. They are laser focussed on the engine and anyone who would use Servo would be fine with a few websites looking broken.

    If Firefox released a Servo-based spin, I'd use that in a heartbeat.

  • Easier, way easier.

    I'm learning Chinese but I can barely communicate. If I spent this time on a programming language I'd have learnt 5 of them by now.

  • We need more local HTML. A local HTML media-player, local HTML versions of all the built-in KDE games, maybe even a local HTML office suite.

    One of the main reasons I use web-based utilities is because each program I install is a security risk. If I can utilize my browser's sandbox that greatly reduces the risk.

  • Trump, if nothing else, knows how to read the room. The problem is that he doesn't govern alone. He can say he's pulling ICE agents out of Minnesota because it's cratering his popularity, but nobody in his own party takes that seriously. What makes Greenland unique is that it would take Trump's approval to launch an invasion, and Trump knows what it would do to his popularity.

    To be absolutely clear this isn't an defence of Trump in any way. It's just "he knows how to read the room" and nothing else.

  • correct horse battery staple

  • The reason here seems to be that the left-right axis is a good-evil axis, so they're trying to find the furthest left position on the spectrum they can occupy. As a result, everyone has the exact same beliefs and holds them with a smug sense of either moral or intellectual superiority.

    It isn't so much herd mentality as it is they've given themselves very little ideological wiggle-room to work with as a community.

  • In terms of escaping targeted government surveillance, Australia is not the country to be in. If the Australian government is targeting you, there's no escape.

    In terms of escaping mass surveillance and of keeping your personal information private, Australia isn't that bad. Simply the fact gmail is allowed to operate in the country means it isn't great either though.

    Strengthening privacy laws around rental property applications is currently the main privacy concern for me, and recent state law changes have marginally improved that.

  • I'm considering swapping from Proton Mail to Fastmail. The fact that it allows 3-year subscriptions is good (I'd prefer a lifetime plan but I understand why that's a non-starter), the fact that it's based local to me is good too.

    EDIT: I wish it also at least offered a rolling 3-year subscription.

  • KDE & Plasma users @lemmy.ml

    Elisa and DragonPlayer are not using my Bluetooth Headphones, is this a KDE thing?

    apps.kde.org /elisa/
  • Linux @lemmy.ml

    Distrohop Recommendation Wanted: Fedora or Secureblue?

  • Privacy @lemmy.ml

    How did the Ad Networks find my search?

  • Open Source @lemmy.ml

    My Spending on Donations to FOSS is just 1.3%, too low.

  • Linux Gaming @lemmy.ml

    Valve launches the Steam Next Fest right on Windows 10 EOL because they hate me, specifically.

  • Linux @lemmy.ml

    How bad is my partitioning?

  • Linux @lemmy.ml

    Is the Trinity Desktop Environment Secure?

    www.trinitydesktop.org
  • Gaming @lemmy.ml

    Any Strong Opinions on Games in my Steam Wishlist (provisional) from 2024?