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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)EX
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Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Well barely. Their given reason is it's "not mission critical" which is a statement veeeeryyy far from "We are doing it out of spite for electric cars" or "We want our oil narrative to hold from our highest echelons of social hierarchy" or whatever other insane reason

  • They had the right to defend themselves into another sovereign territory? After allowing (while knowing) an attack by a terrorist group to happen on their soil without any proper response? And of course our 21st century mind is too short sighted for the bigger picture of why the terrorist guerilla group even exists??

    Just stop this mental gymnastics. We spent some time now learning history, what leaders should have already known. There is nothing forgivable in this war. It's just a continuation and finalization of their lebensraum plan from the 40s, full on genocidal Columbian colonialism perpetrated by Zionists.

  • I think you have been lulled into submission by the decades-long "Let's make it really complicated to repair for no reason other than profits" narrative. This is exactly how devices should look. This is exactly how your TV, radio looked 30 years ago. Easy to disassemble, diagrams on the bloody box, extra fuses, relays if one blows.

    Hell, this is exactly how your desktop looked and still looks. Lots of extra screws, replaceable parts. Easy to disassemble (not even using screws for the panels).

  • What?

    Decentralization literally fights power centralization. There is no inherent position of power.

    Anonymization has no talking point in the discussion of virtual internet power points. Only makes people more true to who they are.

  • It's not really any different than usual dust, other than it is even more likely to scratch your phone (oh no!). The surprising thing is the bullshit price number, I'm sure it's some brain-dead economist looking at the point-price for diamond and with great effort making a single multiplication.

    Edit: The study does note industrial diamond manufacturing, but doesn't go into detail on why it's so expensive for diamond powder, other than saying "it would require much more industrial diamond than is currently produced".... Which is just.... Empty? Considering industry would change to account for such a drastic rise in demand.

  • BIOS was always a micro computer... it's just more standardized now.

    And especially things like IPMI (which is essentially a company-sanctioned backdoor to any intel server) which has a full on webserver with an unknown number of threat vectors, things like this really fall flat for security.

    Just because threats are found for UEFI (an open standard), it means nothing in grand scheme of things, just that it is more observed and more easily dissected for nefariousness.