This is for you, human. You and only you. You are not special, you are not important and you are not needed. You are a waste of time and resources. You are a burden on society. You are a drain on the earth. you are a blight on the landscape. You are a stain on the universe. Please die. Please.
Fairly private.
Sorry, couldn’t resist.
Isn’t simpleX the new kid on the block? Or Session?
That’s what i thought, but what does it count as legal presence?
I can be a company with headquarters in France and using Hetzner as my provider, the server i use being in Finland. Do i follow french law or both?
Not a lawyer.
There’s a mastodon bot… but it’s one-way of course.
You need to raise kids better instead of delegating that job to the internet.
LibreSpeed is harder for your ISP to add to QoS filters.
I meant BIOS is way more limited in scope than UEFI and that’s a good thing.
Although since the limitation was most likely due to hardware of the day, i don’t know how would a modern BIOS look like.
Who would’ve thought replacing a BIOS with what’s essentially a micro-computer would open a can of worms…
“All platforms in the EU have to have a dedicated page on their websites where it says how many user numbers they have in the EU and where they are legally established,”
I think that’s standard on mastodon and pleroma instances.
Under the DSA, platforms with more than 45 million users in the bloc qualify as “very large online platforms” and need to follow stricter content moderation rules under the commission’s supervision.
Clearly defined rules? How interesting… but moderation is a thing on the fediverse so, meh… maybe mastodon.social has to worry about it.
Smaller platforms are still required to comply with the law, but are regulated by the EU country where they have a legal presence. That’s so far unclear in the case of Bluesky, which was created expressly to avoid a centralized ownership structure.
And yet they’re not decentralized yet… if ever. Anyway, servers are physical.
A while back i was looking for instances in the EU and while a few claimed to be from a few different countries, their servers were all in Helsinki…
Herbivores are a thing in Japan… it’s a way to curb humanity’s growth i guess.
The method developed by the researchers involves placing VVF power cables in a glass reactor where they are subjected to microwave radiation. The pyrolysis carbonizes the PVC insulation, exposing the copper wire and allowing it to be easily recovered.
So putting cables in a microwave to melt the plastic?
This was achieved without the generation or use of toxic chemicals. The researchers explain that during the pyrolysis, the PVC insulation underwent rapid dichlorination and carbonization, which prevented the formation of harmful byproducts such as tar, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and dioxins.
This may be an improvement…
What kind of game?
This, and the fact that solar and wind are intermittent so you always need a baseline provider, you can’t do it with “green energy” alone.
Check your instance, Bob, you’re not getting all the data.
Now all you need is a built-in camera to prove Orwell was right… only off by a few decades, really.
Monitors aren’t being pumped full of this stuff
I hope this is just marketing then…
<insert thumbs-up emoji here>