nulluser

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[–] [email protected] -2 points 21 hours ago* (last edited 21 hours ago) (1 children)

Yes. You were complaining about how absolutely awful it is to have to figure out how to choose which Mastodon server to create an account on, because this "federation" thing is soooooo damn complicated to understand.

Then, it was pointed out to you that choosing an email server is no different. Billions of people around the world have been successfully choosing an email server (and switching to different email servers when appropriate for them, or even having multiple accounts on different email servers).

The email example is often used against the"FeDeRaTiOn Is ToO cOMpLiCaTeD" complaint because, other than the specific protocol servers use to communicate with each other, they're no different. You have an account on service A, your grandmother has an account on service B, and all you need to communicate with her is her address.... EXACTLY like every ActivityPub federated service. It's not complicated.

The person responding to you quite sarcastically pointed how how awful it must have been for you to choose an email server, since you were complaining that this whole "federation" thing is soooooo complicated. And your response was that, in fact, it was very easy for you. You made their point for them and didn't even realize it.

Furthermore, you're having this discussion on Lemmy, a federated service, from your account on one of many federated servers, communicating with people on completely different Lemmy servers all over the world.

So, to beat a dead horse to a pulp....

It must have been awful for you to choose which Lemmy server to sign up for. So much unnecessary complication. Simply participating in this discussion on a federated service must be extremely taxing on your cognition. /s/s/s/s/s

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 day ago

A few newly planted trees aren't going to be the thing that stops a business from going in if that's what someone wanted to do. There are plenty of hurdles to opening a business, from owning or leasing the land, to business permits, etc, but a few newly planted trees aren't going to stop anyone.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 day ago (1 children)

She now faces charges including ... , and grand theft.

https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/grand_theft#

My first guess is that she was steeling patient belongings. That's probably not all she was up to, though.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 day ago (3 children)

What are you talking about?

[–] [email protected] 24 points 1 day ago

legitimate faith-based initiatives

Found the oxymoron.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago (6 children)

I think the point is that you can recheck it weekly if you want to see how much it changed.

[–] [email protected] 24 points 3 days ago (6 children)

Unless he also outlaws pasteurized milk, I'll have 0 sympathy for any adults that die drinking raw milk. This country seems to be in dire need of a toxic cleansing. I'm sad COVID didn't do the job better.

 

The Onion’s winning bid for Alex Jones ’ Infowars platform is under review by a federal bankruptcy judge after Jones and his lawyers complained about how an auction was conducted.

[–] [email protected] 25 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (4 children)

Hilarious how you strategically cut off the next five words, clearly saying she's "still here" (in Tennessee). 🙄

Just admit you misread it and move on.

[–] [email protected] 95 points 1 week ago (9 children)

Meh.

I highly doubt this is Trump voters suddenly hearing about Project 2025 and deciding to go look it up and realizing it's bad for them.

I would wager that this is predominantly voters that didn't need the gory details of Project 2025 to be convinced to vote against Trump. But now that he's been elected 🤮, preparing for what's to come makes the gory details suddenly relevant.

 

Researchers say that nearly 336,000 devices exposed to the Internet remain vulnerable to a critical vulnerability in firewalls sold by Fortinet because admins have yet to install patches the company released three weeks ago.

CVE-2023-27997 is a remote code execution in Fortigate VPNs, which are included in the company’s firewalls. The vulnerability, which stems from a heap overflow bug, has a severity rating of 9.8 out of 10. Fortinet released updates silently patching the flaw on June 8 and disclosed it four days later in an advisory that said it may have been exploited in targeted attacks. That same day, the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Administration added it to its catalog of known exploited vulnerabilities and gave federal agencies until Tuesday to patch it.

Despite the severity and the availability of a patch, admins have been slow to fix it, researchers said.

 

Stars are thought to form within enormous filaments of molecular gas. Regions where one or more of these filaments meet, known as hubs, are where massive stars form.

These massive stars, located nearby, would have put the early Solar System at risk of a powerful supernova. This risk is more than just hypothetical; a research team at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, led by astrophysicist Doris Arzoumanian, looked at isotopes found in ancient meteorites, finding possible evidence of a massive star’s turbulent death.

So why did the Solar System survive? The gas within the filament seems to be able to protect it from the supernova and its onslaught of radioactive isotopes. “The host filament can shield the young Solar System from stellar feedback, both during the formation and evolution of stars (stellar outflow, wind, and radiation) and at the end of their lives (supernovae),” Arzoumanian and her team said in a study recently published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

 

HomeVestors of America claims to be the country’s largest cash homebuyer and says it helps homeowners out of jams. But a closer look reveals that the company trains its franchisees to cash in on homeowners’ desperation.

 

Millions of Americans have peripheral artery disease, a disorder primarily caused by fatty deposits that can narrow arteries and block blood flow to the legs. Often, the first symptom they feel is leg pain. Experts say that most treatments are safe, but some have expressed a growing sense of alarm that doctors may be doing procedures that patients don’t need, exposing them to unnecessary risks.

ProPublica looked into artery procedures and found that some doctors are making millions of dollars doing a questionable number of treatments. Government insurers pay well for vascular procedures that are done outside of hospitals, and doctors can bill tens of thousands of dollars for treatments done in a single office visit.

One doctor in Maryland made millions of dollars from the federal government for performing thousands of vascular procedures. A state medical board investigation found that his inappropriate treatments put patients at risk of serious harm. One man had to have his leg amputated after invasive treatments for mild pain, according to filings in a settled lawsuit. A grandmother bled out and died shortly after the same doctor cut into her, according to another ongoing lawsuit. The doctor denied the allegations in legal filings, but declined to be interviewed and did not respond to emailed questions.

 

July 3 (Reuters) - Elon Musk’s Twitter has put a temporary limit on the number of tweets that users can see each day, a move that has sparked some backlash and could undermine the social network’s efforts to attract advertisers.

The limit, imposed to “address extreme levels of data scraping and system manipulation”, is the latest change by Twitter, which was last year acquired by Musk for $44 billion.

What does the latest change mean and what are the alternatives to Twitter? How do the changes impact users?

Users cannot view tweets without logging in to the platform. Verified accounts can now read 6,000 posts per day, unverified accounts 600 posts and new un-verified accounts 300 posts. After that, users will get a message that says, “rate limit exceeded”.

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