Sounds to me like an extension that by design tracks every Web page you visit.
Sounds to me like an extension that by design tracks every Web page you visit.
That reminds me, I gotta restart.
The rest isn’t worth it.
I don’t think that’s really true. I just think we aren’t especially exposed to what’s out there anymore. Or at least, it’s hard to find legit stuff and not AI generated SEO blogspam.
9 times out of 10 I prefer reading, but there’s some videos that are absolutely worth watching over reading. That said, I don’t really want to see talking heads. And I think people should include the channel/creator name in the title.
But as a reality check, I’m looking at the first page of this community and only see one YouTube link. Doesn’t really seem like a problem worthy of a rule.
I will never understand this.
These tools look amazing. Thanks for sharing.
Here’s a link for those interested: https://rethinkdns.com/
Thanks for the info. For others curious, here’s a decent short intro to K3s.
Now I’m kind of wondering if this is light enough for integration tests.
So does this setup like a one-node kubernetes cluster on your local machine or something? I didn’t know that was possible.
You SWOT m8?
the overall malware campaign against the Python development community has been running since at least August of 2023, when a number of popular open source Python tools were maliciously duplicated with added malware. Now, though, there are also attacks involving “coding tests” that only exist to get the end user to install hidden malware on their system (cleverly hidden with Base64 encoding) that allows remote execution once present.
So, a supply chain attack or they’re sending you code to run?
This is a good time to refer to PEP 668 which enforces virtual environments for non-system wide Python installs.
Virtual environments are not isolated sandboxes. This is not a security feature. Do not expect any kind of safety by running things in a venv.
Basically just a pitch for Gemini. The problem with Gemini is that we could do all that now with the web. They’re just stripping features to enforce what they think the Web should be.
I kind of get it. I like the idea of a simplified protocol. No JS engines to be exploited. I like building small static sites and wish more people would.
But also, there’s a million reasons we moved away from plain rudimentary HTML and terminal browsers. Not least of which is interactivity and writability. You couldn’t create a Lemmy frontend, forum, or any kind of database UI using this protocol.
Shy of reading documentation like man pages, I don’t really see the value.
Shutdown is one word though.
The rules announced this week would update the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards (FMVSS), the government’s bible for everything that’s required in a new vehicle before it’s sold — from steering wheels to rearview mirrors — to set testing procedures to simulate head-to-hood impact, with the aim of reducing head injuries. If enacted, automakers will have to test their vehicles using crash test dummies representing adult and child pedestrians for the first time. NHTSA says the changes could save up to 67 lives every year.
And they expect people to stop making trucks because of pedestrian crash testing? Seems unlikely.
At least this isn’t relying on sensors or some other nonsense. Though it might be nice to require things like visibility requirements so people driving Rams could actually see the children they’re flattening.
That’s… what they’re looking for.
The odds aren’t that crazy. There’s about 12k 711 stores. More than 1 gets hit per day.
I’d play that lottery.
It’s cool. I don’t want it.
So where is the line drawn? What about the teens who want to lookup how to do an exercise correctly without getting injured?
From the article:
The platform will still allow 13- to 17-year-olds to view the videos, but its algorithms will not push young users down related content “rabbit holes” afterwards.
Presumably it loads comments when you visit a page. That would send a request with the URL to whatever service they’re running.