I appreciate that you curate the RSS feed. I get very little time for social media these days and I'm glad there's someone here populating feeds with content.
I'm not a huge fan of cynicism and non-contributory comments when this space is meant to be better than the toxic sites we all fled.
There's a plethora of options for tailoring your feed to exclude unwanted content, none of which require attacking other users acting in good faith.
Thanks to your profile, I found several new communities I will happily follow now. Keep up the good work!
I wondered how the heck humans made so. many. posts! Thanks for this post, I may unblock someone else. But maybe not bc I didn't need every stupid comment made by orange people (although it may be a good Idea, residing where I do, to be informed about certain developments pertaining to them).
Normally I would say that nobody deserves to be hacked. But now my perception of the situation has changed.
If viewed like a bank and my data is the money in it, then what's happening mostly is that my money gets stolen. After getting found out the bank says "We're sorry ;)"; the bank might even get insurance money, while I get multiple attempts at accessing my accounts at other services.
Now I would like to see this gross negligence punished. Preferably by a 4x2 to the head. Or cat-o-ninetails.
Exactly. If you run a service, the bare minimum due diligence is to install available updates in a timely manner. Imo, it's criminal negligence if a service gets hacked due to an unpatched system.
Most likely, this isn't being done because the IT dept isn't given enough time to actually maintain systems, so whoever makes that decision should face criminal charges. And orgs like the NSA should be auditing this kind of thing and issuing fines, not spying on US citizens.
Anyone who still thinks that is either new to Linux or profoundly naive.
People still shit downvotes on me whenever I talk about how linux isn't perfect.
Microsoft, for all its faults is at least honest enough to admit outright that their software needs protection. They're still not honest about what kind of protection it needs. But at least they're not going to yoink anything off your system they don't want you to use like Apple does