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Neuroscience Explains Women's Reaction to Sexual Harassment
  • Eh, I have a low tolerance for this kind of bullshit. I know what I like and what I don't like. I went through their posting history before blocking them, and I found that the subjective quality of their contributions failed to outweigh my irritation towards them. To me, it's better to just block them and never risk seeing comments like this from them again. There are a bunch of people on this site who I'd rather interact with.

    As a bonus, they'll only ever have one shitty passive aggressive comment from me to deal with.

  • You've heard of dishwasher salmon, now get ready for...
  • Seems like a worthwhile thing to do! I'm not worried about doxxing, since someone would have to go to pretty extreme measures to correlate with the exact climate where I'm at. I installed the sensor after the hottest time of day had already passed, but here's what it looked like:

    A graph showing the outside temperature versus the temperature in the mailbox.

    I'm pretty sure the spikes in the mailbox temperature were due to cloud cover.

  • You've heard of dishwasher salmon, now get ready for...
  • I have it positioned right now so that the probe tip isn't touching any metal, but I'll probably add a bit of foam. I have some incredibly irritating foam packing peanuts that would probably work well. I'll go do that now.

    EDIT: here it is, in all its gloriously crappy, uh, glory:

    a picture of a temperature probe poking into the inside of a mailbox. A Styrofoam packing peanut with a hole in it has been put over the probe to stop it from touching the walls of the mailbox.

  • Supreme Court halts enforcement of the EPA's plan to limit downwind pollution from power plants
  • As others have said, Utah is, in fact, heavily gerrymandered. We even had a ballot initiative that passed in 2018 demanding that the legislature draw more fair maps. Rather than do that, the shitfucks at the capitol came up with maps that were somehow even worse. Like, we have some real idiots in this state who want to be abused by fascists for some reason. I'm also an idiot, but I am firmly progressive and do not want to suck on a fascist's boot, and I'm not alone. Utah may be red, but Salt Lake City is very, very blue.

    This article does a pretty good job of discussing how fucked the situation here is: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/11/us/redistricting-map-utah-salt-lake-city.html

    Here's an archive link if you hit a paywall: https://archive.ph/4scLB

  • Game-Changing HIV Shot Can’t Get to High-Risk Groups Fast Enough | Lenacapavir proved it's possible to prevent 100% of infections in women. Access and affordability are the next big hurdles.
  • Isn't less disease better than more? I won't argue with you about sex or other things that people have hangups about, but HIV is also transmissible through blood. There are people who got HIV and developed AIDS for reasons that are innocent in any reasonable context. If you're a first responder or good Samaritan, doctor, nurse, or find yourself in some other context where it's possible for uncontrolled mingling of blood, you're at risk of contracting HIV. If particularly vulnerable people can be completely protected, then everyone's odds will improve.

  • Supreme Court halts enforcement of the EPA's plan to limit downwind pollution from power plants
  • As a Utahn, it pisses me off that we still have fucking coal plants here. We have 200-250 days of sun here. Shit, we're at 4-5000 feet of elevation, so the solar flux is fucking intense. Why the fuck haven't we built solar panels and shut these plants down? Why aren't our reservoirs covered in at least some number of panels to cut the evaporation? Rather than fix that, let's scum up the air for us and our neighbors with our shitty 1900s era coal plants and our fucking oil refineries that help contribute to some of the worst air quality in North America when an inversion hits Salt Lake City.

    I have nothing but contempt for the basket of cunts our gerrymandered districts keep shitting out. It's amazing how ugly the politics can be in such a beautiful place.

  • Critical MOVEit vulnerability puts huge swaths of the Internet at severe risk
  • The article mentions this, but this is the second time this piece of software has been in the news in as many years. Last year they had an SQL injection vulnerability on an unauthenticated page that was widely exploited to grab all kinds of juicy data. This year, it appears like their dumb, closed source SSH library may be responsible for allowing unauthenticated access.

    I'm excited to see what vulnerability 2025 will bring. Maybe this will push more people to use audited open source code like openssh and the tooling built around it. I'm pretty sure sshd is compliant with HIPAA and PCI.

  • Props to Alpine and Kali for disabling this bullshit out of the box
  • I always just derive the interface name from first principles. Like, if I want to know which interface will be used to get out to the internet in a script, I'll just find the one that's L2 adjacent with the default gateway. If I'm given an egress or cidr, I'll just find the interface that has that IP. Modern iproute2 has a JSON output option which makes getting this information pretty trivial. Doing that means that it doesn't matter what scheme your OS is using.

    I personally prefer the persistent names for Ethernet, although I don't like them for WiFi. Luckily, it seems like my wireless adapter always just ends up as wlan0. I'm not sure why that's the case, but it works out well in the end for me.

  • Warnings over lethal and contagious strain of mpox as children in DRC die
  • I don't know the tone or content of your previous messages, but I appreciate that you removed potential misinformation and took the whole exchange as a learning opportunity rather than digging in your heels.

    I also appreciate that @girlfreddy@lemmy.ca simply asserted the facts present in the article as a part of their initial message. It's nice to see positive interactions develop out of a less-than-ideal starting point.

  • You've heard of dishwasher salmon, now get ready for...
  • I live in Utah where it's been sinfully hot and dry for the last week. I fully intend to test this theory. I just bought a high temp probe that should get here tomorrow. I will provide an update once the testing has been completed.

  • We need this level of energy. All the time...
  • Isn't this just a research grant? Plus, it's like, 11 million dollars. That's a shitton of money, but also an inconsequential amount of money when compared to the dogfuck tire fire that is the US healthcare system.

    Like, I am regularly filled with rage at the stupid ways the US and various states waste money that could have paid for meals, houses, or hospital beds. I hate how we don't take care of people who need help. I hate that we all have to live in a place where rage like this is normal and accepted and reinforced, because it means we're all suffering under so much shit and all we can do is get angry. This video just makes me feel sad because it looks like a trauma response. I can empathize with and try to understand trauma, but I can't encourage it.

    I just don't think a concept study for a train on the moon is the cause for our problems. I don't think it even represents the cause for our problems, because at least it's trying to look forward and consider/solve issues that humans will eventually face.

  • Password must match the following
  • Ooh, you have a library that generates text to match regexes? I'd be interested to see it! That's something I've actually had a need for. Hypothesis has something like that for property-based testing, but I couldn't make use of it in the context I needed it.

  • Password must match the following
  • Jesus, what a terrible regex. I love regexes and use them frequently, but you could just, y'know, declare your requirements and then check they're being met using string methods. Min length 8, max length 256, one set/dict/map for each character class, the minimum count for each character class, and then loop over the string and check that your declared requirements are being met. A regex might be faster (if the regex engine isn't being asked to do crazy lookup shit), but why torture yourself? Just parsing the string is also nice because it's readable and makes frontend documentation easier to generate.

    Or skip all of this shit and just require longer passwords. My company has mandated 16 character passwords with no character class requirements for years and it's great. Want to use a password manager? You're set. You a big fan of passphrases? correct_horse_battery_staple your way through that shit. A long password + 2FA is all you need for security.

    edit: also fuck you apparently if you want to have a ñ or ü or (⁠・⁠o⁠・⁠;⁠) in your password. I'm guessing the database column for this only supports ASCII? Smells like smelly MySQL/mariaDB to me.

    edit: well, Unicode might be allowed. I get turned around with all of the groups and references. I guess it also depends on how the regex is being compiled. I know that in Python you can pass a bitwise flag to re.compile to force ASCII.

  • Removed
    We Remember Noam Chomsky, the Intellectual and Moral Giant
  • I honestly don't know. I do know that people regularly reference the Chomsky Hierarchy (or works based off of it) when writing FSAs or parsers, since the class of grammar dictates what you can use. A FSA can't be used to completely parse a context-free grammar (or anything above it). The thing about parsing HTML with regex is an example of that, and is what first keyed me in to the different types of grammars.

  • Removed
    We Remember Noam Chomsky, the Intellectual and Moral Giant
  • I find it interesting that the article makes no mention of his linguistic work (edit: this is not a criticism of the article, just an idle remark. It need not be mentioned, given the political focus of the article). The Chomsky Hierarchy has had a massive impact on the world of software development, for example. If you've ever written a regular expression, you've used his work.

  • L.A. County wants to cap rent hikes at 3%. Landlords say that would push them to sell
  • I'm genuinely interested in how government involvement increases the cost. I honestly don't know. Like, is it dealing with zoning and permitting? I hope my good-faith intent is coming through here, I'm not just trying to bait an argument.

  • InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)BA
    Badabinski @kbin.earth

    Alt account of @Badabinski

    Just a sweaty nerd interested in software, home automation, emotional issues, and polite discourse about all of the above.

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    Comments 22