

OP uses it here: https://mastodon.social/@bluebbberry/113992874321283600
Maybe there is some whitelist so it can’t reply to anyone else yet?
OP uses it here: https://mastodon.social/@bluebbberry/113992874321283600
Maybe there is some whitelist so it can’t reply to anyone else yet?
30 years ago we had to remember phone numbers, now ip addresses. We are going in circles.
Don’t use .local
as an internal domain it can cause problems. Use .internal
, it was recently reserved for this purpose
It’s unbelievable that there is no footage of the actual construction, only animations showing what happened in the ancient and forgotten days of 2008… I just read the wikipedia article on its construction, and the it’s very similarly structured.
It sounds like the “documentaries” Hbomberguy rants about in his 4 hours long video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yDp3cB5fHXQ
Here is a 45 minute documentary about the same construction with actual footage: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xEAJmxe27h0
I use mailbox.org, my 2 points for it were:
deleted by creator
1.5 A for 10 h is 15000 mAh, at 12V. Current powerbanks can do that. Here is a redmi one, specs says it can do that, 20000 mAh, 12V is the maximum: https://www.mi.com/global/product/20000mah-redmi-fast-charge-power-bank/specs
Buy an usb-pd 12V cable, one end of the cable is type c, the other end is standard dc coax. The cable has a chip inside, so it will always ask for 12V from the power source, it’s like 5 USD, I have one for a similar usecase, works perfectly. They work only if the source can send the required voltage, if a powerbank can only send 5V or 9V it cant convert it up to 12.
It should look something like this, make sure the voltage is correct before buying:
Yes, anyone can buy access.
And with SS7 they can get even more precise location, and you can’t really hide from that if you want to use a phone with a phone number, what is the point. This is an interesting way of attack, noone really thought about this before, but it’s not “oh-my-god everyone can be tracked via signal”. I guess the closest server doesn’t even selected via geographical distance, but much more depends on network infrastructure of your location, so Google Maps API can’t really help here.
And again any VPN could defend against this, so if you want to hide which country you are in currently, it should be the 0th step to use a VPN.
Was posted yesterday to a lot of communities, it’s very clickbait:
allows an attacker to grab the location of any target within a 250 mile radius
So it’s a bit rough… In Europe it means basically which country the target is in. Also cloudflare servers are not evenly distributed in the world, so resolution can differ wildly worldwide.
With a vulnerable app installed on a target’s phone
So it’s not really zero click.
Sounds interesting though, nice writeup, but not as scary as it sounds from the title.
You have to selfhost bibliogram, working for me, I usually get rate limited but get all updates once or twice a week.
There is a facebook bridge in rss bridge, for a long time it worked, I don’t follow its development nowadays, maybe someone with some php knowledge can resurrect it.
With bibliogram you can follow instagram pages in rss: https://sr.ht/~cadence/bibliogram/
Facebook pages used to work with rss bridge: https://github.com/RSS-Bridge/rss-bridge
I tried that recently. I didn’t like that it doesn’t have a widget, and the downloads and current playlist are completely separate. Also there was no option to automatically continue when connecting to a headset (this was working in Ultrasonic 4.8, but not in 4.7.1 I hope they fix that bug sometime…) So after some weeks use I switched back to Ultrasonic.
My offline android music workflow:
Details on wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byford_Dolphin#Diving_bell_accident
In the video he speaks about much more pressure difference, 333 PSI is 22 atm, the unlucky divers were only pressurized to 9 atm. So it could be even worse…
Lemmy-ui uses markdown-it
: https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy-ui/blob/main/package.json#L65
Markdown-it follows the CommonMark spec with extensions: https://spec.commonmark.org/current/ As I see superscript is not part of the spec, but listed in the markdown-it readme as a plugin, so I guess it’s coming from there: https://github.com/markdown-it/markdown-it?tab=readme-ov-file#syntax-extensions
They are also listed in package.json:
"markdown-it-sub": "^2.0.0",
"markdown-it-sup": "^2.0.0",
https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy-ui/blob/main/package.json#L73
Lemmy docs about markdown support: https://join-lemmy.org/docs/users/02-media.html#text
You shared an amp link. Here is the canonical url: https://www.dw.com/en/german-institutions-depart-x-a-day-after-musks-weidel-talk/a-71266331
What is AMP? AMP is an open-source web component framework aimed at improving the UX of websites, stories, ads and mail. It was first announced by Google in 2015 and has grown considerably since then. But the project has also been subject to a lot of criticism.
AMP threatens the Open Web. For example, Google mobile Search’s Top Stories carousel has a premium position above of all other results, which is only accessible for cached AMP pages. This has the effect of further reinforcing Google’s dominance of the Web.
Other concerns include: the questionable performance boost, the way cached AMP pages keep users in Google’s ecosystem, the obscurity of publisher’s domains on cached AMP pages, the loss of sovereignty of websites, the lack of functionality and diversity on some AMP pages and of course, privacy concerns.
To sum up, AMP and it’s implementation have some major flaws that threaten the Open Web. And as long as that’s the case, AmputatorBot will be there to remove AMP from your URLs.
Was posted via an article 4 days ago on other communities: https://lemmy.world/post/25524944
https://lemmyverse.link/lemmy.world/post/25524944