IllNess
Yes, you are correct. Good catch.
@-moz-document domain("fandom.com") {
.global-navigation {
display: none;
}
body {
margin-left: 0 !important;
& > .main-container {
width: 100% !important;
margin-left: 0 !important;
}
& > .fandom-sticky-header {
left: 0 !important;
}
}
}
It was very nice of you to write this out for the other guy. I will look through the uploads and see if anyone else has the same idea.
I don't want to step on any toes but your CSS only works on the home page.
I added more CSS for it to work on the fan pages:
@-moz-document domain("fandom.com") {
.global-navigation {
display: none;
}
body > .main-container {
margin-left: 0 !important;
}
body {
margin-left: 0 !important;
& > .main-container {
width: 100% !important;
margin-left: 0 !important;
}
& > .fandom-sticky-header {
left: 0 !important;
}
}
}
I'm not really sure what happens if Proton bans your account for any reason but Proton Pass does have offline access. I assume if you turn off internet access, you can still get all your passwords.
Your suggestion would be great.
For the time being, I was using OR and shoving the top 8 instances from Lemmy Explorer.
site:alien.top OR site:lemmy.world OR site:lemmy.ml OR site:lemm.ee OR site:sh.itjust.works OR site:hexbear.net OR site:beehaw.org OR site:lemmy.dbzer0.com
Is there anyway to search all Lemmy instances through Google or DuckDuckGo like site:reddit.com?
If there was a disclosure, that would be fine. Documentaries used actors, reenactments, illustrations, 3D generated content, etc. before. If it helps viewers visualize the topic, it is fine. If it skews the story to push a theory of the documentary, that's not fine.
If they denied and they didn't know how 51 million records were taken, that's even scarier.
It is creeping. If your neighbor goes outside in public and you stare at her from your window blinds, with the lights out just so you can see her ankles twice a day. Yes, she is in public and you are only looking, but the obsession is not normal behavior.
Thanks for this.
When Google said they were stopping 3rd party cookies, I thought it was just a simple security setting. The new system, Protected Audience, seems like 3rd party cookies without the whack-a-mole approach of listing every cookie advertisers can take, especially since there is nothing stopping data collectors from extracting data from it, like what Mozilla said in the article.
Hopefully there are fake data dumpers or cleaners for Protected Audience which would reduce the effectiveness of this system but looking how the Chrome team treats browser extensions, I doubt it.
Unfortunately, due to ASUS being based in China, we are unlikely to get a response until next week.
Even responses are late. Maybe Asus is using the snail mail for everything. They are going to sending floppy disks with the unlocker next month.
Considering how security is often forgotten on smart devices, having an oven connected to the internet is pretty scary...