Nostr is the Bitcoiner protocol. It’s simple but inflexible and not that censorship resistant (if you don’t run your own relay you can lose data). ATP is more like Ethereum, way more complex but you can build actually useful apps with it.
I love controversy.
Nostr is the Bitcoiner protocol. It’s simple but inflexible and not that censorship resistant (if you don’t run your own relay you can lose data). ATP is more like Ethereum, way more complex but you can build actually useful apps with it.
Or limit copyright terms to ~20 years and repeal Section 1201 (together with 512 for good measure). That would cover far more than just old games.
Feedbro has a simple and customizable UI and supports both Chrome and Firefox.
Don’t see a problem with it as long as they don’t get copyright on the outputs of their AI. That would make enforcing any IP impossible on the internet because there’s no way to prove it wasn’t AI generated.
You can’t be both a small community and replace for profit social networks. I thought the point of all this was the second one.
Do you think Ernest should run and develop this whole site out of his personal income?
Just let people build more housing. In most American cities it’s either totally impossible or so expensive only millionaires and big real estate companies can afford it. There’s no reason for a permitting process that takes 5 years or for single family zoning, other than homeowners self interest and racism.
Maybe don’t call them shitlibs?
That’s probably a kbin UI bug
Don’t do that. Deleting your account is enough and some of your comments might be useful info that doesn’t exist anywhere else.
Sort by hot (or new if hot doesn’t work) instead of active.
I made a version that makes the instance name normal weight instead of bold. Think it looks better that way.
Valve has a pretty unique flat structure that could protect them from a corporate buyout, even more if Gaben decides to transfer ownership into an employee trust and turn it into a full co-op when he leaves.
Even in the US there’s no law against hosting encrypted files. They could be liable if they knew a specific file was illegal/pirated and didn’t take it down but a recent SCOTUS case (think it was Twitter v Taamneh) set the precedent that general knowledge of illegal activity is not enough.
It’s their decision and you should respect that. I also don’t agree with the defederation and the rest of their policies but you can just not use it. No need to turn this into a political conflict.
Do you know where kbin shows the list of defederated instances? I can’t find anything like that, there’s just the modlog.
Mint is very opinionated and made explicitly for less technical users. If you have basic command line skills (or you’re willing to learn) Fedora gives you more choice and in my experience it’s actually more reliable than Debian based distros.
This gives me an idea. Make a federated torrent site. It would be practically impossible to take down and one instance going offline because they don’t have money wouldn’t destroy everything like in RARBG’s case.
Email addresses are not private info. You don’t have to put your real name in them.
It covers Apple/Google tax. They didn’t want to have lower revenue on mobile or go the Spotify route.