Have strong opinions, but I welcome any civil fact-based discussion.
Mastodon: @[email protected]
ICC can’t impose death penalty as it’s against international human rights law.
Several of mine:
Gaming communities are hard to grow since they require people who play the game to participate. You can only grow it on your own so much by posting the latest news.
Other active ones on lemmy.zip
:
The Instigators - 6/10 - Not great, predictable story with a dash of action. Manged to not fall asleep, so I count that as a win.
Gunner - 3/10 - It’s bad, terrible, really. CGI was at that level that it’s so was awful that I was interested to keep watching just to see how worse it can get.
Out of Exile - 4/10 - Not good, but might work for those that enjoy slower pace and unexpected endings.
There were warrants issued on March 25 to him and his brother, which were ignored.
Instance blocking only hides communities from that instance, but not users.
lemmy.world
is defederated from hexbear.net
instance…
The video is 2 part, first is the summary of the case and another is about why this argument from Disney is the biggest pro piracy argument.
Basically, the case is about a doctor who had a food allergy and went to a Disney owned restaurant that promised to cater to people with food allergies. The doctor asked staff 5 times to make sure they were aware of her allergies, and all 5 times they said yes. It’s literally the most straightforward wrongful death case ever. But then Disney decided they want to fuck more people over, so they made an argument that the case should tossed and move to arbitration because her husband signed up to Disney streaming service on a free trial, years ago. And Disney is ignoring a lot of other facts, like that husband is not the one suing, her estate is, he cancelled the trial before the period ended, so he wasn’t even a subscriber at the time. The streaming site has an arbitration clause, but Disney park doesn’t so it doesn’t even matter. If the case can’t go forward, it will be only because US is a corporate-owned shithole, legally it’s a moot argument.
As far as piracy, it just highlights how fucked up everything is since if the husband just pirated, DIsney couldn’t have used that argument in court. So Disney created a situation now that if you want to be able to sue them for your loved one’s death - pirate Disney. It’s the most pro piracy argument that even the biggest normies can relate to.
What you want is something like https://github.com/hluk/CopyQ.
It’s listed as a honorable mention in the article.
More likely, it was just taken on 2 different devices. It’s reasonable that the camera or phone they owned changed in 15 years.
I think it more comes down to it not being Discord than people liking it.
Element X (Matrix client). Basically anything that offers F-Droid or open source release will have builds without built-in notifications. Play Store/App Store builds requires using native notification systems.
It was a conscious decision for them not to enforce E2EE by default. https://web.archive.org/web/20211215132539/https://infosec-handbook.eu/articles/xmpp-aitm/
XMPP clients have like 10 different implementations because of that and are not always consistent with each other or even function universally across platforms.
But I’m not an author. That would be @[email protected].
Spoofing just changes the displayed called/sender ID, not the actual number. They would still need real numbers for each account. And they block a lot of VoIP numbers, like most services these days. And getting carrier SIMs or e-SIMs is a not that easy.
No mandatory 2FA as far as I know.
It’s there for a reason. You can’t easily create a spam waves if you need a phone number to create an account. And they added usernames now, so you don’t need to share your phone number with people you want to talk to. It’s just there to create an account and can be hidden after that.
There is Session, that uses UUIDs for names with no phone number requirement, which is basically a fork of Signal with decentralized Loki on top of it.
Not all of them work, and most require some details to create.
That might work in most places, but there are countries that only sell pre-paid cards with ID registration.
It really depends on each person’s threat model. But there are a few things everyone would benefit from. Like VPN, email aliasing, password manager, 2FA/MFA. They don’t have any convenience cost and in most cases make your life easier.
If you are interested in learning more:
If you read the blog post you would know there are 0 mentions of VPNs there. VPNs have very limited purpose, and it’s just a small tool in the arsenal of privacy.
No audit, no 2FA, no transparency report, limited servers, proprietary clients. There are better options.