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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/)CA
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1 yr. ago

  • It's a well written article worth reading in full

    In the government's telling, the school routinely missed compliance obligations in large part because the researchers found dealing with security protocols "burdensome." And when the researchers complained, admins gave in.

    This is a good motivator, security is important, and there will always be a spectrum between convenience and security, and it's easy to drift too far down to the dangerously convenient side of the spectrum.

    This Georgia Tech lab got dangerously convenient security policies, lied about it, got ratted out, and now is the government's displayed example.

    Now it's either getting pwned or getting sued, instead of just risking the former. Hopefully this will motivate more people to take security more seriously, especially when hosting sensitive data, and especially when accepting federal government money.

  • Bullshit. She's great, with a long track record to back that up.

    Not only is she not old and not in mental decline, but she's also charismatic, engaging, and she is progressive. Congress and the courts will limit her policies of course, but that's by design, the government is not just the president.

    Beyond that, with picking Walz and other strategic picks in her campaign, she's shown that she knows how to form a good team and avoid landmines.

    I'm looking forward to the Harris presidency and voting For her, not just against Trump.

  • Mark Kelly seems like the right pick to me, he's got the overview effect and has unique experiences and leadership, already has experience in the Senate which is their main job, can probably take his swing state blue, and his seat can be easily replaced.

    Shapiro is too pro-Netanyahu IMO, I'm neutral on Beshear, but his seat isn't as easily replaceable, and losing a democratic governor would suck, and he might not take the state blue.

  • All good

    She was a prosecutor before becoming an attorney general, then a senator, and then of course a VP.

    While she has enforced the law as a prosecutor, as was her job, when it came to policy making she has been consistently progressive, and much more aligned with Bernie and the left than the center.

    I don't think this is well known, and some people think she's just another centrist neo-liberal, but that is not the case when you look into what's she's done

  • When the headlines are about random maga types being quoted calling her "little whore" and n-words - it's clear that yeah, the -isms are indeed out and about, the media is just reporting it.

    The reality cannot be denied, they aren't deep faking the clips.

    The maga crowd dosnt counter her policies, her voting record, her career, her speech, her age, her cognitive function

    They go after what she was born with and what that crowd has been indoctrinated to hate.

    That's where the ism's come from.

  • I think he should be prosecuted for his crimes too, but look around, that's not what's happening.

    If the government cannot provide justice, the people will in their own ways.

    I fear the path we're on as a nation and world, and i don't see an offramp currently. I cope by preparing for instability, not by denying the current situation. We live in interesting times.

  • And yet my company is forcing me back into the office, I've been resisting for over a year, and now they're threatening hr->path to firing for insubordination if I don't come in... I've been working remotely effectively since March 2020.

    Started sending out applications to actual remote jobs, it just sucks, it was a good gig while it lasted.

  • I too am thinking this, Biden has picked an amazingly effective team that is making big changes for the positive for the average person, and has made some key strategic victories despite the courts and Congress being so against him.

    He's old, he needs his nap time more often than a spry 35 year old, his speech difficulties suck - but the actions his administration makes are not ignorable to the rich, and so I think the rich attempt to make them ignorable to the masses with their control of capital

  • It stems from a conflict of need and want from what I understand.

    The need for a national id and the refusal of the citizens for a national id. There was a lot of controversy about the SSN because it could be used as an id and the people didn't want that being so privacy conscious, so they made the numbering system simple and that card fragile to show and dissuade that it isn't a good id to get the SS passed.

    But of course, there's still a want/need for some kind of unified id across the nation - so it was used anyway

    And thus we have a terrible id system: flimsy, deterministic, and mostly-unchangable

    If you know the social security number of someone born in your hospital in the same day, it's likely your ssn's are right next to each other and could be guessed

    At this point, I don't think there would be much resistance to a national id, and it would be great for an update that is both securely random, and changeable so that leaking your SSN isn't such a crazy risk, having it in a laminated card with a chip and electronic signature even better.