The whole Bellendcat thing sounded a bit sus to me when I first came across them being lionised in the UK press. One plonker sitting in his bedroom outdoing the might of the Five Eyes? Mmm, sure.
One who spudges.
Linux • KDE • Mozilla • Matrix • Proton • Music • Star Labs • Veg
The whole Bellendcat thing sounded a bit sus to me when I first came across them being lionised in the UK press. One plonker sitting in his bedroom outdoing the might of the Five Eyes? Mmm, sure.
Pot/kettle.
‘CIA sidekick’ gives £2.6m to UK media groups
https://declassifieduk.org/cia-sidekick-gives-2-6m-to-uk-media-groups/
NED money has gone to UK investigative groups Bellingcat, Finance Uncovered and openDemocracy, as well as media freedom and training organisations Index on Censorship, Article 19, the Media Legal Defence Initiative, and the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Pot/kettle.
‘CIA sidekick’ gives £2.6m to UK media groups
https://declassifieduk.org/cia-sidekick-gives-2-6m-to-uk-media-groups/
NED money has gone to UK investigative groups Bellingcat, Finance Uncovered and openDemocracy, as well as media freedom and training organisations Index on Censorship, Article 19, the Media Legal Defence Initiative, and the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
It was Mozilla for me back in 2000. I gradually replaced all the proprietary apps I was using on Windows with FLOSS alternatives and then finally made the mover to Linux around 2010. The only closed stuff I use now is an iPhone and I despise it.
I don’t know what the authors are complaining about. All the AI is doing is trawling through a lexicon of words and rearranging them into an order that will sell books. It’s exactly what authors do. This is about money.
Oh, it’s not that simple. I could call, email or any number of other methods. It’s just that I’d rather not communicate with a right wing, paranoid, fear-spreading, racist nut job. I just need to know they’re still breathing. This individual is spewing bile every single day,
Good news. I use it once a week to check if a relative is still alive.
As others have said, it still works and works really well.
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from Teddit.
I have only ever read about 20 subs on Reddit and I’ve never had an account there. I use Teddit to read them for stuff that hasn’t made it to Lemmy yet.
In Australia it’s ute (pickup) drivers. If it’s a faded mustard colour it’s an ancient farmer driving 30 km/h below the speed limit in a no-overtaking area. If it’s bright red it’s the farmer’s grandchild driving at 30 km/h above the speed limit as he* overtakes you in a no-overtaking area.
*It’s always a he.
Silvio Berlusconi.
40%. That’s nearly a whole cheek.
lol There’s often a fair bit of waxing involved.
It says “no fully exposed” arse pix. What percentage of exposed derrière is acceptable? Asking for a friend.
This is not at all what it’s meant for but I use Element messenger for this purpose. It’s on all my devices, it’s e2ee, it’s shareable if needs be. It’s also a damn fine messenger in its own right.
As someone who has spent years extolling the virtues of Matrix/Element to family members I can assure you that there is no known rebuttal to the phrase “but I don’t care about privacy”. All it needs is to visit a site and sign up. No software required whatsoever. Good luck with GitHub and your ageing aunt or gobby nephew.
Or just download the full fat version from an overseas server run by the company making the product. Expecting the general populace to compile stuff is a little bit optimistic. We’re talking about a country where most people don’t know what a socket outlet is called or the difference between desktop wallpaper and a screensaver.
As someone that never had a Reddit account* but still read about 18 subs on a daily basis (via Teddit) I was a bit sceptical about the value of signing up for Lemmy. So far, so excellent. It reminds me of the newsgroups I used to frequent 25 years ago. Big enough to be useful, small enough to be comfortable.
*I never had a Facebook or MySpace account either. I used Twitter for a year about a decade ago but it all seemed a bit “look at me” for my taste.
One of the problems I have with search engines when looking for tech solutions is that the results are incredibly out of date. I don’t bother any more and just go straight to the product’s own support forum. Where possible I add the forum’s own search entry to Firefox’s search box. At least I no longer get answers to a problem no one has had since 2018.