???? This is just textbook sso/openid but backed by the government. There's nothing intrinsically insecure about having third parties send you directly to a trusted government site for authorization.
Yeah let's weaken our political messaging for the camp where acting forces want to feed the latino population to alligators in the name of pedantry! Fuck the fact that most Americans would probably guess Dachau is a cheese or something, and that Auschwitz is certainly the most recognizable of the camps taught from the holocaust, we want to be 5% more correct!
I don't want to be an asshole but after checking a couple of those out they all appear to be post-authorization vulnerabilities? Like sure if you're just passing out credentials to your jellyfin instance someone could use the device log upload to wreck your container, but shouldn't most people be more worried about vulnerabilities that have surface for unauthorized attackers?
Last time this comic popped up someone ruined my life by mentioning trickster, so I'm obligated to do the same for some of you. It's a mod for minecraft that introduces a turing complete system of circles that pretty closely resembles real life functional programming languages in terms of overall structure. It's explicitly an esolang, so sometimes the suffering is the point, but it is really neat to be able to spin up a quick spell to solve some problem you've encountered in the world.
Sometimes our internal CI tools break and I can't build either. I think GitHub actions syntax is actually valid in forgejo as well so I don't really think it's a problem.
If all they needed was the features of a scientific calculator they would have used their calculator app, it's pretty clear based on context they're saying they needed access to a graphing calculator for coursework.
It's a pretty standard tool to assist with learning any math beyond algebra, and was a requirement in both my uni and high school classes. I'm fortunate enough to have gone to a high school where there were plenty of calculators provided by the school, but the major exams like the SAT and whatnot did not provide one and would also not have allowed phones.
???? This is just textbook sso/openid but backed by the government. There's nothing intrinsically insecure about having third parties send you directly to a trusted government site for authorization.