I don't care if she's XR or not, what is important is that prominent people are changing their mind based on scientific arguments. This is the process that we need to see more on both sides of the climate denial - both fossil and 100% RE - both of which are driving increase of CO2 emissions.
It's very sad to watch diehards like Greenpeace whose energy policies are changing rather chaotically every few years with one constant element being opposition to nuclear.
@RachelNLeahs don't be so pessimistic :)
In the real world, we have to deal with end-of-life applications installed on unpatched end-of-life operating systems... and still make this secure.
Ok, but let's preserve the proportions: @farhan did not write a scientific article, he wrote a brief note and certainly it's not the case it "can be bullshit" as you kindly classified it.
Estimates of casualties range from 100'000 to 200'000 (well, even 400'000 but this seems far outlier) which would make ¼-⅓ of the population. And the conditions in which they were transported and settled were anything but humane - cattle carriages, then dumped in the fields.
I'm quite familiar with this topic actually as while going to Caucasus for the last ~15 years I've met probably dozens of people who actually survived the deportation and the memory is still very fresh.
Probably the most idiotic thing in the whole deportation was collective responsibility: out of 2'000'000 Balkars maybe 2'000 actually collaborated with Nazis but the whole nation was deported.
At the same time ROA had like 50'000 Russians.
So when my Nginx config contains literally such section:
proxy_pass http://ipfs-gateway/ipns/krvtz.net/;
It does not require change of CID on each change of website, but the first request (because then it's cached) will take ages and time out.
Just wondering: if you publish a website to #ipfs often what's the best strategy?
1) `ipfs add -r website/`, address using recent CID and set it in DNS using `dnslink`
2) publish recent CID into IPNS (`ipfs name publish CID`)
3) Something else?
Option 1) sucks because each change to website requires updating CID in my website's reverse proxy and DNS.
Option 2) sucks because IPNS so is slooow on both publishing and resolving...
Well, the whole thing is factually correct with just one geographical mistake.
That's unfortunately very sad as it demonstrates the actual emotional damage disinformation does to quite regular people. If over a few minutes she enumerates this stream of nonsense, just imagine how much she must have watched it to memorize it so accurately. She is also very agitated, so the propaganda did 100% effective job.
Soviets deported many nations in the South, not only Chechens - Balkars, Ingush, Kalmyk, Tatars etc. in total over half million people. There were terrible atrocities committed:
This is precisely the discussion to have to avoid these atrocities. Many religions and ideologies preserve a "perfectly pure" picture of themselves but only when you start to dig in the past you discover things of which we should be less proud of. We cannot be guilty for whatever happened before we were born, but we certainly can remember it to say "stop" when similar things happen during our lifetime.
@kravietz it can now also detect userId and keyId making it a truly one-click service (no input of public key needed). Of course, in the case of keyId alone, the website urges you to find another of verifying the keyId or fingerprint to confirm authenticity of signer.
Linux kernel release candidate now includes support for Baikal-T1 CPU designed in Russia.
#Russia #Hardware #Linux #news #CPU #opennet
Тут в Linux завозят поддержку ещё второго по "популярности" после Эльбруса российского CPU - Байкала.
> Изменения с реализацией поддержки Baikal-T1 были переданы разработчикам ядра в конце мая и теперь включены в состав экспериментального выпуска ядра Linux 5.8-rc2.
It's about time we stopped buying into the propaganda phrase "ad blockers", and started calling user-protection tools like #uBlockOrigin and #NoScript what they are; spy blockers. If I display ads on my website using HTML and CSS, spy blockers won't block those. As far as they know, the text, images, audio, or video that make up the ads could be anything. So what's really being blocked is not ads, but tracking. Thanks to the authors of this site, for pointing this out:
https://shouldiblockads.com/
@strypey I can help pro bono, what is needed?
Polish expat into UK. Information security engineer. Caver & cave rescuer (thus the bat). NHS volunteer & blood donor.