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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/)GO
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2 yr. ago

  • But you can read the source code and get an understanding of whether it is collecting private information or not. You can theoretically also fork the code and make your own version of Lemmy where you're ripped out the parts that collect private information. Can you do any of those things with Reddit? Absolutely not. You have no idea what exactly Reddit collects and even if you did you have no control over that collection.

    What you're doing is questioning the privacy aspect without putting in the effort to check if your questioning is valid. Nobody is preventing you from reading the source code. And if you don't trust anyone else running the instance you can fork Lemmy, make whatever privacy changes you need and host your own instance. That goes beyond the capabilities of the average user but that's the catch with privacy, if you can't trust others then you have to learn more to get by without others.

  • They aren't making a shitty finals. Last I heard they originally wanted to make a tarkov style extraction shooter, but when they got Tarkov creators to play it and call it shit they pivoted into some kind of a tarkov/overwatch mix of hero based extraction shooter or something like that.

    That's when I stopped paying attention as it's most likely in development hell.

  • Because in many countries 0.5 is considered non-alcoholic and most countries don't differentiate between non-alcoholic and alcohol-free, so it's legally not false advertising.

    Also you physically cannot get drunk when drinking 0.5 abv beer which means in terms of drunkeness there's functionally no difference if people drink 0 abv beer or 0.5 abv beer. Recovering alcoholics can have a response to but that can be due to sensory cues making the alcoholic believe they're getting drunk and not the actual ethanol in the drink. Recovering alcoholics (at least to my knowledge) are also recommended to steer clear of alcohol free beer due to the same sensory cues. So who really needs the distinction between non-alcoholic and alcohol-free?

    And as a follow-up. If there really is the need for distinction should that distinction exist for food as well? Do we need a disclaimer that ripe bananas can contain 0.2 to 0.4 ABV of alcohol?

  • I guess I should've specified. I don't think it's rent-able. It's more than a 100 year old house in the middle of nowhere with more than 100 year old plumbing (hint, no plumbing), no internet outside of mobile network which is also very flaky since there aren't many cell towers nearby, water comes from a nearby well which limits the amount of water you can use because it's not a deep well and the list goes on. It's not a modern house that's going to just sit empty, it's a relic from a different era where the main value the house has is of sentimental value. If it was to get sold the next "owner" would most likely tear down the house and turn the entire plot of land into agricultural land.

    If it was a decent apartment somewhere where people would actually want to live I'd absolutely "rent" it out. Not take any profits from it, put a bit to the side in case something breaks and if they leave without breaking anything they get their money back.

  • This is why nobody listens to people like you. Someone has a legitimate grievance trying to do what you want them to do and what is your response? Completely ignore the grievance and go "I can't believe how fucking stupid you are, just do the thing." Really helpful.

  • I think the difference between the first and second is whether you have a deep understanding of how high level languages translate into hardware operations. If you're a novice how that translation works might as well be magic.

    The second panel understands how that translation exactly happens and then it absolutely makes sense.

    The third one is the next step where you have an deep understanding how the underlying physical phenomen makes computers work, and again that might as well be magic because explaining it is like explaining magic.

  • I get the privacy issue but there's effectively no non-kernel anticheats on the market. I think VAC doesn't run in kernel level and CS is known to have a huge cheating issue, so much that competitive CS has spun off into third party provider who among other things uses a kernel level anticheat. You can't be for client side anticheat and be against kernel anticheat. Non-kernel anticheat simply doesn't do its job.

    I can't imagine how Microsoft locks down Kernel so that it's also locked down for cheat developers (because they don't really care about regulations). If it's locked for anticheat developers but not for cheat developers then it's going to end up being a bad time for us.

  • Have you considered that the reason cheaters have to go hardware level is because kernel level anti-cheats are effective at what they're supposed to do?

    I'll also ask this question, what do you are the alternative solutions to client side anticheats?

  • In infosec it's known that there is no impenetrable system. If someone wants the break in they will find a way to break in. Security is built around the idea of deterrence. Make it as annoying as possible so people thinking about breaking in would think it's not worth the effort.

    Same principle applies to cheating. Anyone really wanting to cheat will find a way to cheat. The purpose of anticheat isn't to make cheating impossible, it's to deter the low effort cheaters. If you had two identical games, but one doesn't have anticheat then the game without the anticheat will have more cheaters.

    In the same vein anticheat isn't a magic bullet against cheating. There goes so much more into preventing cheating including specifically developing the game in a way that makes cheating harder.

  • Perfect is the enemy of good. You're not at home while you're working and if you do full time then a third of the day you're not using your home, why don't you let others use your home while you're not using it? You're also putting your individual needs above giving someone else shelter, the only difference is where you've drawn the line.

  • I don't consider it unethical. For example if my father dies and I inherit his house where I grew up, he grew up, his father grew up and his grandfather built. That house has a lot of sentimental value in it. I have settled down very far from there. What am I supposed to do? Throw away the family legacy or uproot my entire life?

    I think as long as I don't rent it out it's acceptable to own it. It's just extra cost for me to keep something of sentimental value in the family. I'd even be okay with paying extra tax on it considering I think every house you own that you don't live in should be taxed extra.

  • Yeah, it's not about monetization. I think for content creators the biggest limiting factor is the user base. If you make a video but nobody sees it then what's the point of making a video? You want people watching your creations and the more users a site has the more likely you're going to have people watching your video. So a real suggestion would be something like video visibility which is kind of a hit or miss on Youtube since the magical Youtube algorithm pretty much throws only clickbait.