I’d honestly prefer raw parroting in most cases, even if it’s “obviously” wrong. I don’t want people selectively interpreting the facts as have been conveyed to them, unless they’re prepared to do a proper peer review.
I sometimes admin. But usually not.
I’d honestly prefer raw parroting in most cases, even if it’s “obviously” wrong. I don’t want people selectively interpreting the facts as have been conveyed to them, unless they’re prepared to do a proper peer review.
Though btw, I also think it’s fascinating the difference if you look up Pyhäsalmi Mine gravitricity "2 MW"
vs Pyhäsalmi Mine gravitricity "2MW"
You’ll get different articles entirely
I googled Pyhäsalmi Mine gravitricity "2 MW"
and EVERY article covering this has also cited 2 MW.
Now, under Occam’s Razor, what’s more likely:
I don’t know which one it is. But I’d generally lean against 1.
As a Bay area native, I’ve never encountered worse drivers than the entire state of Maryland.
An API token is more secure than a password by virtue of it not needing to be typed in by a human. Phishing, writing down passwords, and the fact that API tokens can have restricted scopes all make them more secure.
Expiration on its own doesn’t make it more secure, but it can if it’s in the context of loading the token onto a system that you might lose track of/not have access to in the future.
Individual API tokens can also be revoked without revoking all of them, unlike a password where changing it means you have to re-login everywhere.
And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Lmk if you have questions, though.
DAE enshittification bad!!1!
Right? Like, I felt like I was missing the punchline here.
I hesitate to ask, but, why do you have your IP change every minute? You seem to have a very atypical usecase
Session network binding on its own seems pretty damn basic.
Speaking for myself, I greatly appreciate the fact that it was moved to Github because 99% of all open source projects I’ve ever wanted to contribute to in the past have all been on Github. Kbin (and alexapy, on gitlab) have been the only exceptions.
And that’s not even mentioning my work also uses Github for our internal repos.
Speaking purely selfishly, it’s simply more convenient to be able to manage and track my time and contributions all in a single place, and I can’t imagine I’m alone. I’m looking forward to seeing Codeberg’s long-term goals of federation see fruit, but for right now it was simply an obnoxious extra hurdle.
Ernest has some big life stuff going on right now (you can check out his posts if you really need to know), and hasn’t been able to review/merge in PRs for kbin lately. Furthermore, kbin.social doesn’t even have the latest changes that are merged in, so the community fork mbin was made by @melroy, one of the most prolific contributors to kbin.
As someone of color (Indian) who is often mistaken as being foreign/religious until they hear my accent…
I feel the other commenters here are missing the mark. This isn’t about fixing them, or learning to “accept them as they are”: bigots should never be tolerated.
Which is to say, your reasons for being “bigoted” towards the bigots isn’t a matter of prejudice: you’ve extrapolated a pattern.
But you don’t want to apply this pattern unfairly to people you haven’t met, because that’d make you bigoted as well.
Well, I have good news for you: you aren’t at any risk for that. Real bigots don’t think they’re bigots. People with prejudices don’t consider their judgement unsound. They think they’re the most unbiased, reasonable people in the world, and often try to push their opinions on others with violence, whether it’s verbal, social, or physical.
By simply acknowledging internally that you have thoughts that you consider unideal, and unfair, you’ve done a thousand times more self-reflecting, and have more capacity for self-correcting, than someone like my parents would.
Don’t try to beat the bad thoughts out of yourself. Acknowledge them, and pledge to act better than they’d have you.
I have the advanced plan as well, and I was recently doing my migration from gdrive; I definitely uploaded over 10 TB a day without any issue.
But seconding what others have said: is that really even an issue? Gdrive only ever allowed 750 GB a day for upload, if you remember.
It’s apparently a great way to become single, soon.
Jesus fuck thank you, it’s so hard seeing a bunch of doomer shit in threads like this