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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/)LW
Posts
19
Comments
1,833
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • What is this article? Besides terrible, I mean. This article is terrible.

    First of all, this isn't a new leak. It's not even a combination of old leaks. It's just somebody noticing that a bunch of leaks existed and did an Excel Sum operation on the passwords on them.

    According to Vilius Petkauskas at Cybernews, whose researchers have been investigating the leakage since the start of the year, “30 exposed datasets containing from tens of millions to over 3.5 billion records each,” have been discovered. In total, Petkauskas has confirmed, the number of compromised records has now hit 16 billion. Let that sink in for a bit.

    And to add insult to injury, the article has this gem:

    Is This The GOAT When It Comes To Passwords Leaking?

    Password compromise is no joke.

    Certainly not with writing like this.

  • I was paraphrasing and trying to be nice. Fine, you didn't say humans yearn for the workplace. You said humans existentially require the workplace.

    I think if AI replaces humans in the workplace, even with UBI, humans would cease to exist shortly thereafter as our lives will have become meaningless

  • According to technical experts, internet service providers across the country have begun implementing a rule that limits data transfers from sites using Cloudflare to just the first 16 kilobytes. This technique is relatively subtle but effective: very lightweight, basic websites can still load, creating a façade of normal internet function, while modern, media-rich sites are effectively broken.

    16 KB per website? What part of the normal internet is that small? What part of the indie web is that small?

    e.g. look at the smallest sites on https://512kb.club/

    Or is this just 16kb per request, which would make more sense with the following explanation:

    Analysts report that similar throttling is also being applied to other major western hosting providers popular with Russian users, including Germany’s Hetzner and the US-headquartered DigitalOcean... [they] are widely used by Russians to host private VPN servers, which allow them to bypass the Kremlin’s ever-widening blocklists.

    AFAIK, VPNs maintain a long-standing connection that would definitely use more than 16kb at a time.

  • I see no reason to engage with, or trust anything created by, a bullshit generator. If Digg claims to "care" about the humans, then making the top comment into a brick wall (which has zero accountability) is a funny way of showing it.

    But then again, I'm sure their privacy policy also says they care about your privacy.

  • this would-be Reddit competitor, built for the AI era

    Oh no...

    The founders think that the internet is being flooded with bots and AI agents, which will create demand for online communities like Digg that foster real human connections.

    Okay, Digg has my cautious attention...

    Beneath posts, Digg is leveraging AI to summarize the article’s content.

    And they lost me.