Using tools to break the encryption for backup purposes is legal in the US, but distributing tools to do so is not legal because the tools can be used for non-backup purposes.
Using tools to break the encryption for backup purposes is legal in the US, but distributing tools to do so is not legal because the tools can be used for non-backup purposes.
I definitely remember hearing that term in the 90’s.
Vivaldi will never have it
And one of those flaws is thinking that the world needs to be full of shitty people just so it’s not “boring”
It’s the API that ALLOWED the misuse in the first place, so the developers are the ones to hold accountable.
Git was specifically CREATED to facilitate this exact mailing list workflow.
So you’re saying it’s about as robust as a typical Linux application then?
Considering that the vast majority of comments on every thread (including this thread) are from users on different instances than OP, I’m going to answer: “literally everyone on Lemmy, constantly, and on every post”.
It sounds like what you meant to ask was more about interoperability between different platforms, but keep in mind that even if other platforms didn’t exist, Lemmy would not be what it is without ActivityPub federation.
If you have red hair, that might be the reason.
Opera 12 was my main browser until it died and was replaced by a completely unrelated and terrible browser called Opera 2013. Opera 12’s spiritual successor is Vivaldi, and that’s what I still use now.
Vivaldi is the only browser that has all of the UI features that I want… No amount of extensions and customization of Chrome, Edge, or Firefox has been able to come anywhere close to matching it.
Some people here are failing at basic reading comprehension… so many comments talking about “Lemmy clients”, when the whole point is that this for links from OUTSIDE of Lemmy.
That being said, I wonder if this couldn’t be solved by Lemmy directly somehow…? Ideally we could have some way to say “this is my home” that any given instance could know and redirect you from any linked instance back to your home, without any middle-man.
But I don’t know of any way to share that data without some central repository host (which obviously goes against the fediverse vision). Ideally there could be some kind of “shared local storage” in the browser that all instances could use, but I’m not aware any way to do that.
Obviously a browser extension would work, but I don’t think that’s a good solution.
This has nothing to do with that. They already have all the data they could ever need to train the model.
It literally can do that, yes. But the plug-in version is separate and requires a subscription.
This thread is about Linux on the desktop, servers are not really relevant to this discussion.
There will never be a world where average users prefer typing arcane command line shit over clicking on a button in a GUI.
I’ll use IPv6 as soon as my ISP starts supporting it.
I haven’t watched that movie since later this afternoon.
Terraria and Path of Exile
You wish it was like that in the medical industry, but it absolutely is not