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@knurd42@social.linux.pizza
2024-04-10 06:41:23

Some article or statement on the #Internet angers you?
Then write a reply!
But afterwards consider deleting it.
nature.com/articles/s41598-024

@netzschleuder@social.skewed.de
2024-04-10 03:00:09

inploid: Inploid: an online social Q&A platform
Inploid is a social question & answer website in Turkish. Users can follow others and see their questions and answers on the main page. Each user is associated with a reputability score which is influenced by feedback of others about questions and answers of the user. Each user can also specify interest in topics. The data is crawled in June 2017 and consist of 39,749 nodes and 57,276 directed links between them. In addition, for …

inploid: Inploid: an online social Q&A platform. 39749 nodes, 57276 edges. https://networks.skewed.de/net/inploid
@benb@osintua.eu
2024-05-09 19:54:46

Fact Check: White House Press Secretary Did NOT Answer Question On 'Ukrainian Manifestations Of Nazism' -- Altered Video: benborges.xyz/2024/05/09/fact-

@mgorny@social.treehouse.systems
2024-04-10 05:22:38

Of course, I can't start a day without being awfully angry about some shit.
So #Gentoo suddenly undoes USE=lzma [and USE=zstd] that used to be enabled by default in 23.0 profiles, apparently based on "consensus" on the mailing lists. The "consensus" boils down to one conspiracy theorist developer complaining, and being supported by 3 users whose Gentoo contributions boil down to having to express their opinions on everything on the mailing list.
This isn't only a problem, because Gentoo is letting itself be controlled by a vocal minority. This is a problem, because we've enabled something that can affect program output, told everyone to upgrade and rebuild their systems, then pulled the carpet from under them.
Wait, did that random app start using LZMA compression now that you've enabled it? Well, bad luck, you won't be able to open your files anymore. Surely, there's no better #security than not being able to do anything!
Unfortunately, sys-apps/kmod had explicit IUSE= lzma by default for a while now, so there's still a risk that you'll be able to boot your system. That's not good for security at all!
#xz

@thomasfuchs@hachyderm.io
2024-02-11 18:09:14

“We were that close to going out forever. But there was one man who taught us to fight, to storm the wire of the camps, to smash those metal motherfuckers into junk. He turned it around. He brought us back from the brink. His name is Connor. John Connor.”

@laimis@mstdn.social
2024-05-10 20:02:44

This is the best source of stock splits, delistings, and other corporate actions that I have ever seen: stockanalysis.com/actions/
Makes me wonder where do they get the data for it. I have tried perusing the web a bit and just can't find one conclusive answer.

@Techmeme@techhub.social
2024-05-08 23:20:39

Some Stack Overflow users say their account was suspended after they attempted to alter their posts in protest of its OpenAI partnership to supply data for AI (Dallin Grimm/Tom's Hardware)

@inthehands@hachyderm.io
2024-02-11 01:16:11

How are the cool kids these days identifying who on the web is linking to their site?
Now that browsers have (rightly! hooray!) generally stopped sending referrer headers, web server logs can no longer do this.
Google Analytics and similar are effective at this exactly to the extent that they’re intrusive and hand everyone’s data — visitors and site owners alike — to increasingly distasteful actors.
A whole-web crawl could answer this question in principle. Is there one tha…

@thomasfuchs@hachyderm.io
2024-02-11 18:09:14

“We were that close to going out forever. But there was one man who taught us to fight, to storm the wire of the camps, to smash those metal motherfuckers into junk. He turned it around. He brought us back from the brink. His name is Connor. John Connor.”

@pbloem@sigmoid.social
2024-05-09 09:04:11

The #stackexchange plot deepens. Somebody noted that SE has an arbitration clause in their terms of service.
That means that if they illegally re-license the SE content for OpenAI to be more permissive than CC-BY-SA, the copyright holders (us) can't sue: they have to use an arbiter (originally one that SE chose, but this seems to have changed).
This seems an unlikely play. …