but do you have zombie mode?
zombie mode
spritesheetImg.src="https://i.imgur.com/Frt8JKU.png"
but do you have zombie mode?
spritesheetImg.src="https://i.imgur.com/Frt8JKU.png"
Infinite wealth
score = 100_000_000_000;
Open all shafts
shaftsOpen = 10;
Add 1 worker to all shafts
Array(shaftsOpen).fill(0).map((_, i) => (shafts[i].workers.push(new Worker())));
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
Lawful Masses with Leonard French covered this yesterday. He is a copyright attorney. He starts the video with the opinion that the ToS wouldn’t protect CrowdStrike.
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
No, I was just quoting/linking to the sources. I don’t follow or know what type of content they normally create.
I was looking for other angles, but haven’t found any yet. There’s clearly lots of people recording in the video broadcast by CNN. I did find the following though.
I clearly didn’t read it. It makes sense, if users aren’t visiting the API then it really doesn’t matter that it’s not redirected on insecure connections.
I disagree.
You shouldn’t serve anything over http. (The article argues that there’s risk of leaking user data) Whatever you’re using for a webserver should always catch it. A 301/308 redirect is also cached by browsers, so if the mistake is made again, the browser will correct it itself.
If you make it fail, you’re just going to result in user confusion. Did they visit the right website? Is their internet down? etc.
It should be possible to ping him to a post or comment though. (or for him to comment or post here)
Vitalik Buterin also just turned 30 at the end of January.
These statistics are only as good as their method of data collection.
Yandex is not that popular in the United States, their data collection seems wrong. Semrush ranks reddit #3 in the US.
It is owned by Microsoft.
I thought that the idea of just explaining to instance hosters that they can start user-like scripts on every page might be a good enough plugin system for LemmyUI until there’s more effort into a real plugin system. Users don’t have to install extensions, and people running instances can make decisions for improving the UI.
With a centralized services like reddit, this doesn’t work very well. Though the fediverse allows lots of customizations when it’s related to themes.