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2 yr. ago

  • It'll almost certainly be part of Google Play services. Like their other, more crude, Anti-Theft implementations.

  • For clarification, it's communities, not sublemmies.

  • You just answered your own question in the title, you call them communities. It's what they are called by the Lemmy-UI software, and also why they have the /c/ prefix in their URLs.

  • The thing is that on these types of platforms old posts get pushed down. And actually on Reddit until very recently old posts became locked, and unable to be interacted with.

    And if something hasn't been posted for years, it's almost guaranteed that new people will see the repost and it probably won't even be seen as a repost.

  • OP is a huge troll, they created their own community to hate on linux and ban anyone who doesn't agree with them even slightly. They're also deliberately using the auto remove on ban function to obscure the content of the removed comments from appearing in the modlog.

  • Yeah and since Online bank accounts can also almost always be reset if you lose the 2FA/MFA key by calling customer support, or going to your bank and speaking with themt in person, there's almost no risk of losing access completely. It's a service you have access to because you're you. Something that isn't the case with Reddit, Github, Lemmy accounts, or Masotodon. I'm not able to regain access after losing those 2FA solutions by virtue of being myself, they treat you just like the attacker in those cases. Really not worth it there, both since what is being protected isn't worth it, and the risk far outweighs it.

  • That's a great way to lose access if your device gets lost, stolen, or destroyed. Which is why I'm against and will continue to be against forcing 2FA and MFA solutions onto people. I don't want this, services don't care if we're locked out which is why they're happy to force this shit onto people.

  • I have a feeling it was caused by something like that, likely a failure of some kind. The drop is way too steep and abruptly for it to be natural.

  • Unsurprising since Proton is optimized by Valve specifically for playing games. Crossover, Wine, and Whiskey are more general purpose. They will work fine and can be optimized and tweaked, but Proton will work better out of the box.

  • I think now it'll just run it through proton if a native linux release isn't found. At some point they seem to just have enabled Proton support by default for games that support it. It's only for games that have a non-functional linux Release that you have to mess with them.

  • I think this user has an irrational disdain or hatred of linux that causes them to believe things that aren't true, or haven't ever been true. I mean he literally created !linuxsucks@lemmy.world just to post memes complaining.

  • Are you sure? I know it was like that when it first came out but I think now they have it enabled by default, just install and run the games under it automatically.

  • It comes with Steam by default and is automatically used out of the box when a native linux version of the game isn't found.

  • It also does have an API which can be used by apps, including alternate frontends which don't use JS.

  • There are more popular people that hang out and comment often in the main communities, then there are people who pass by. I know on Reddit I've seen certain people pop up frequently in certain communities. It's a smaller platform so you see the popular ones more often but it's not that unusual.

  • Many of their games do have native linux versions, and a lot do work under wine or proton, which can be used as a Non-steam game in Steam or even without Steam.

    Their launcher doesn't yet have a native linux version but it's completely optional, and does still run under wine if you really want it.

  • That is actually a pretty nice feature. Would be great if we had it here. Though it isn't explicitly needed, request communities are also a good solution.

  • I would say they probably are, but it's way more likely than not that this is intentional. Why call communities loops? What about a community makes it a "loop"? It doesn't make sense, unless they're deliberately trying to cause confusion with fediverse terminologies.

  • Let's pretend that the US created the internet as a whole and that it wasn't created by a joint effort from different actors around the world. That still doesn't mean they own the internet today like you continue to imply. And consequently means that any group, organization, or country which chooses to deploy alternate DNS Root servers (forked or fully custom) on their own DNS providers is well within the right to do that without needing to build their own internet, and simply use all the non air-gapped infrastructure they have already.