I wish this was true but sadly it is not. Anti-choice candidates have continued to be elected and pass laws since June 2022.
I wish this was true but sadly it is not. Anti-choice candidates have continued to be elected and pass laws since June 2022.
yet they’re not open to being alerted to problem posts (implied by the “checkmate” sass)
This is not the case, not they say “report and move on”. Reporting is literally alerting them to the problem post.
They are legally obligated for some US citizens. California (~40 million people) has a law similar to GDPR.
They also don’t have a way to check where you live so you can do the request and select either option (GDPR or CCPA) and they will fulfill the request.
In case you didn’t know and for everyone else that prefers the old UI there is a clone for lemmy.
https://github.com/rystaf/mlmym
lemmy.world has it installed at https://old.lemmy.world. The creator has it running at https://mlmym.org/ for other instances that don’t have it installed.
I don’t mind them existing either. My issue is with how they show up in the subscription feed now. I’d prefer separate feeds for shorts.
Broadcast not cable, and owned by Disney.
They did the opposite and shoved a pointless shorts section in the middle of your subscription page so you can’t see what you actually want to look at.
I do and it’s already available at https://old.lemmy.world for anyone who prefers it.
Someone else mentioned old.lemmy.world if you like the old reddit UI. That one is closer to what I want personally.
But yeah, options is great. Just need a way to save a preference now so it will use my preferred UI when logged in. Either that or throw together a redirect plugin.
Unfortunately this is even worse than the default lemmy UI with even more wasted space on desktop. But hey, more options for people is always nice and hopefully some will like this.
I read the article, it’s also shit and fails to properly talk about the issue instead of ranting about data loss.
Did you read the article? Because as far as I can see it fails to actually say shit about the problem. From just this article I can see why people are blaming the author for not having redundancy.
The Arstechnica articles however do actually say what’s going on, so yeah this appears to be a real issue with these drives disconnecting.
More like, it’s less sketchy if you pay for a domain at all. .ml was free, what did they think was going to happen?
They can do that in the image as well.
Copy/pasted text stays with time too and doesn’t have the issues that pictures of text do. Also hosted images disappear all the time.
States do not have unrestricted rights and cannot negate human rights.