My meme/shitposting alt, other @Deebster
s are available.
I’d seen it in my Firefox/Win10 + uBlockO setup. I just used yt-dlp and then a uBlock “quick fixes” update sorted it.
I’d seen someone calling all us Kagi fans shills which I thought was stupid at the time, but now I’m starting to see why they might think that.
I’m not sure I even knew they had a Captcha, I guess I don’t look like a bot.
Apart from that archive.today seemed down yesterday - I was worried they weren’t coming back!
Your comment confused me since I thought you were saying the EFF was cancer at first.
Yeah, which is good, right? Built-in generally works better.
The last section makes me think they can’t be bothered to take it into production. It’s weird; they spend all these words describing the problem and their solution then conclude with but 🤷♂️ no-one really cares.
I use Gboard which does the same, but I also have multiple languages enabled which you switch by long-pressing the spacebar and I regularly trigger the wrong one - very annoying.
Oh, so css is in there - I’d assumed it would be a false positive.
They misspoke: Hurd will be usable in year 1970!
As a student I wasted so much time mucking around with flags and settings in Gentoo. It definitely wasn’t pointless since I learned so much, but I didn’t need to sit there and watch it compile as much as I did.
It was pleasing to watch though, just like defrag in Windows.
I use screen
still too, partly because it’s generally installed on everything already, like vim. I hardly ever use anything but a maximised (i.e. full-terminal) screen at once, so it doesn’t sound like I’m missing much from tmux.
De/reattaching’s extremely useful and another thing I really like in screen is being able to scroll and search the scrollbuffer.
If I was ready for an upgrade, I’d probably go for zellij.
Thursday’s patch is the product of recent penetration testing work that the Mozilla Foundation funded, Mastodon cofounder and CTO Renaud Chaput told Ars. He said a firm called Cure53 performed the pentesting and that the code fixes were developed by the several-person team inside the Mastodon nonprofit.
This is good to see, although it’s worrying that such a serious vulnerability went unspotted for this long. At least, I hope it wasn’t spotted; maybe some bad actor’s made subtle use and all our bases are belong to them.
This doesn’t affect me, but I’m sure there’s going to be a vocal tiny percent that absolutely hate this news.