altkey

joined 5 months ago
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[–] altkey@lemmy.dbzer0.com 12 points 1 day ago

jerry-mandering is a source of unequality

[–] altkey@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 1 day ago

You shit the whole onion at once and hear it hit the water.

[–] altkey@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 2 days ago

I've heard this one before...

[–] altkey@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 6 days ago

Pips are still eyeing quadrocopters as a viable option for everything. Pitchers of said ideas are only there for money and visibility that they get anyway. I'm impressed that door-to-door sellers are now the meta pick in this life.exe

[–] altkey@lemmy.dbzer0.com 6 points 6 days ago

A dozen or so, and while it's good for it keeps the light on average level through 95% of it's lifetime, when it ends - it ends, while with cheaper lighters you have a little hope you can milk them for days as they weaken.

[–] altkey@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

Harry could've been in The Files,
If Germione left her desires
To end all unjustice in one rerun
Of the Cuban Missile Crisis.

[–] altkey@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 6 days ago

Sunday brings me Golmli mood.

[–] altkey@lemmy.dbzer0.com 6 points 6 days ago

Satyr life > all this human bullshit.

 

Something turn-based, battery-light and enjoyable.

Lichess was my first guess, but I'm looking for some other options.

[–] altkey@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

THESSALONIKI, Greece (AP) — A bomb explosion targeted the home of the president of the Greek association of prison guards early Saturday morning in the country’s north.

Varsamis has worked for many years at Diavata prison, west of Thessaloniki, known for housing many criminal gang members as well as convicted terrorists.

Two police officers said they are focusing their efforts on criminal gangs rather than terror groups. Both spoke on condition of anonymity because they are not supposed to comment on an ongoing investigation. The police have already deposed Varsamis, they said.

The police’s Organized Crime Unit is leading the investigation.

[–] altkey@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago) (1 children)

screenshot of a Youtube page for an edit of 'Dig' by Mudvayne being inaccessible

Dammit! I can't DIG. What do?

[–] altkey@lemmy.dbzer0.com 11 points 6 days ago

This, or it would be entirely outsourced to the highest commercial bidder which also happens to be something like Google, Meta or Palantir.

 

No affilation with r/Vermintide, FatShark or anyone else

https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/c/fatsharkgames

2
submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by altkey@lemmy.dbzer0.com to c/fatsharkgames@lemmy.dbzer0.com
 

archive.today: https://archive.fo/e4y9t

I think it'd be an interesting insight for you, folks. The article as presented in russian news media Kommersant via automatic translation:

The State Duma has proposed to impose fines for searching for illegal content

On July 17, the State Duma plans to consider in the second reading amendments establishing criminal and administrative liability for a number of violations in the field of communications and information - from the organization of uncontrolled VPN networks to the transfer of SIM cards to third parties. The most resonant in them was the novelty on fines for citizens for the deliberate search for extremist materials, including using means to bypass blocking. Proving the fact of such a search may be problematic, experts say.

Initially, the bills tightening regulation of the Russian segment of the Internet concerned other issues - the activities of forwarders and foreign officials, but by the second reading, amendments were proposed to establish a number of new provisions of the Administrative and Criminal Codes of the Russian Federation. In particular, this concerns the criminalization of the transfer of Internet resource accounts and the provision of VPN access not controlled by Roskomnadzor, the recognition of the use of means to bypass blocking as an aggravating circumstance in the commission of crimes, the prosecution of companies and individuals for participating in the exchange of SIM cards and providing them to third parties, etc.

The most resonant amendment was the one on administrative liability for “searching for obviously extremist materials and gaining access to them,” including using VPN services (Article 13.53 of the Code of Administrative Offenses).

If the bill is adopted, citizens will face a fine of 3,000 to 5,000 rubles. In the document, extremist materials are those included in the relevant list of the Ministry of Justice, as well as those that meet this definition in accordance with federal law. In addition, if the amendments are adopted, advertising of “software and hardware for access to information resources with restricted access,” that is, VPN services, will be prohibited (Part 18 of Article 14.3 of the Code of Administrative Offenses of the Russian Federation). Citizens will face a fine of 50,000 to 80,000 rubles, officials - from 80,000 to 150,000 rubles, and legal entities - from 200,000 to 500,000 rubles.

A high-ranking source familiar with the development of the project explained to Kommersant that the amendments establish liability only for the deliberate search for and actual access to obviously extremist materials, “that is, to such materials that are clearly included by a corresponding court decision in the list of extremist materials published by the Russian Ministry of Justice, which he cannot help but know about.” “Visiting the personal pages of citizens, including those with a ‘dubious reputation’, is not regulated or limited by these amendments in any way,” the source assured Kommersant.

However, the initiative has already raised questions from the head of the "Safe Internet League" Ekaterina Mizulina, who came to the conclusion that she will no longer be able to pass on data on extremist communities to the police, since to do so she needs to "purposefully monitor such content." "And the activities of the Ministry of Internal Affairs employees on monitoring may also be recognized as illegal," Ms. Mizulina was indignant. She recalled that the list of extremist materials contains 5.5 thousand items - from "violent content with videos of migrant murders" to memes and tracks of foreign agents, and wondered whether every citizen should familiarize themselves with it: "How will they establish intent in searching for such materials?" The activist was answered in absentia by the deputy head of the State Duma Committee on Information Policy Oleg Matveychev, who allowed that an exception could be made for security forces who are looking for illegal content.

Ekaterina Mizulina’s concerns are shared by experts.

“It’s not very clear what kind of behavior the legislator expects from the user,” says Comply partner Maxim Ali. “It’s hard to imagine that an elderly citizen knows about the Ministry of Justice registry, will find it, and will check the material they are looking for in it before each search query.”

According to him, it is also not entirely clear how access to prohibited content will be proven: "I clicked on a prohibited link, but it is blocked. The moment of the request will be recorded, but if the page does not load, this should not be a violation."

Based on the design of the new administrative composition, it will be necessary to prove that a specific user, firstly, carried out a search, secondly, that the information sought is prohibited, thirdly, that he knew about it, says lawyer Andrei Grivtsov: "It is only possible to know in advance if there is evidence that you are familiar with the list of extremist materials." However, practice is moving towards a consistent reduction in the standards of proof, the lawyer notes. "It can be assumed that in practice they will hold people accountable if they simply find a search query on a phone regarding something extremist or a tab with open material," says Mr. Grivtsov.

Yuri Mirzoev, CEO of the law firm Mitra, does not rule out that complaints, user behavior analysis, monitoring of their requests through providers, as well as data from IT companies, may be used to detect the fact of searching for extremist content. According to Vasily Stepanenko, CEO of the cloud provider Nubes, the amendments are intended to make the user understand that their search queries may be revealed by both the prohibited resource itself and the VPN service they used to bypass blocking: “And thus reduce the desire to use them.”

They propose:

\1. Legal liability for sharing sim cards (and internet accounts) with third parties. In the system they built, where those are usually directly linked to internal passport, they became used as one of the major way to ID you and to log into any service, including government ones. Therefore they kinda locked themselves in the thinking framework where phone number IS identity, like SSN, in spite of them being sold like candies just 10 years before. And although they would have a hard time controlling it now, they roll out ways to punish at least those, sim-farms they'd find while following other crimes.

This, btw, got my normie peers pretty distressed because most of us gave dumb phones to our elderly with SIMs registered to us, not them. I'm sure that these cases wouldn't be targeted at all, but as many laws there does have this unnerving blanket nature you can persecute everyone with it.

\2. VPN ads are everywhere, and although they are for now in the gray, you'd be surprised how deep the untold divide lays: a lot of people either do have a free VPN or\and a subscription or feel proud they don't need it because local content is all they need. Suuuure. As proposed there, using them WHILE doing something questionable may factor into deciding ypur actions were intentional.

\3. Searching for the extremist content. This one is not well formulated, and that's the goal. While we have a list of extremist materials that is rather strict and sober, includes stuff like white pride, isis, other propaganda, we also have laws that promotes LGBTQ+ media as extremism, there are previously popular artists that are called extremists for their lack of enthusiasm in our war efforts. There's no solid explanation what of these are counted as extremism and how this would be decided if there was your intent to look for them - not even access, copy or distribute - but just search it. Yet, I see the monopoly of Yandex, our Google, being very handy at persecuting thought crimes against the Motherland.

P.S.: The notion I'd put there - Russia is a good, useful example of how privacy and the rule of the law (and logic) can be eradicated, the one europeans should be aware of when their own lawmakers try to pass e2ee ban or something similar.

 

It has obvious advantages, but the way it went no further than mini\micro-usb in design department shows it's flaws even more.

The death of connecting parts was always a concern, and short, smooth format without any kind of a clipse fixation makes it fail to connect after a while like any other with the same production quality.

The overuse of it nowadays leads to bigger failure rates because you now can use cords interchangeably, so these connectors wear off faster than before (not to say your devices have faster charging times and higher discharging rates, so the plug\unplug routine is generally more frequent nowadays).

Your go-to universal cord can charge your phone, earbuds, vape, notebook, video-converter, beatmachine, microphone, gamepad etc. And unless you have a dedicated cord for each one of those, you'd experience them breaking up at surprising speeds.

The two-sided design is it's crowning jewel, but I could've traded it for some better one-sided longer design with some sort of a lock instead. Some DP cords I have have a pair of teeth that can secure the connector in the hole, with a button to release it. It is not possible in Type-C I believe.

Big Cord bathes in cash as we speak.

 

TLDR

The idiocracy has won. AV is coming into force across multiple countries — many around the same time. We'll be forced to verify your age, and we already know we'll lose almost all our users in the process.

Only a few sites like ours are being targeted, so porn will remain available everywhere else. Minors won’t be safer — just redirected to social media platforms or darker, unregulated corners of the internet.

This is the result of an ongoing moral panic, carried by dishonest ideologues, opportunistic politicians, and a media class that thrives on fear and outrage.

We're witnessing censorship disguised as “protection,” incompetence dressed up as virtue, and a total collapse of rational policymaking. And everyone will pay the price.

Not a news material per se, but an opinion piece from the large player in the industry, reflecting on current law changes, media coverage, logics behind AV push et cetera. It needs not to be taken as a single source of truth, but an interesting inside from their end of the deal.

If it's not a good fit there, feel free to delete it.

I didn't put NSFW tag because it's a discussion on pornography without graphic details of any kind.

 

It was mothssive!

 

DAE looks down on every piece of hardware with the lights that you can't turn off? I sure do. I don't need a distraction (or even erection) when I maintain my servers.

 

and then their israeli peers double down on supporting the Gazan Bomber, who leaves millions of people without electricity, and therefore light.

I'm just a silly flying guy, but I want to see his ass in the mothin, 2 feets below.

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