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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/)EE
Posts
11
Comments
428
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Right now, this is analogous to having an active shooter walking around gunning down people, and a random person safely elsewhere saying ‘Don’t shoot him, he has rights!’. No, people are actively suffering and dying. Fix the emergency first, then consider the ramifications.

    The problem is that the ramifications are clear as day and imminent. Other parties have been calling for ISP blocks for the longest time.

    Using your analogy, the active shooter is walking around holding a dead-man's switch connected to bombs in a few other areas. People like you are saying "it doesn't matter that bombs are going to explode, just shoot him!"

  • They are not blocking the domain. They’re making people drop their nazi-ISP from the internet backbone.

    That's fantastic news, I agree.

    But who decides what should ISPs block next? Should Florida pressure American ISPs to block all abortion-related sites? Should Disney pressure ISPs to block all torrent sites?

  • Can I just say, thank you for the extremely informative post.

    This is the kind of comment that reddit was valuable for - being able to jump on a thread about find an obscure expert in pretty much any niche field. Lemmy hasn't really reached a sufficiently large userbase, so seeing a post of this is like a breath of fresh air.

  • The companies value doesn't change, but shareholders hold X number of stock, so to them their portfolio improves.

    When companies split their stock, it's to keep the price at a reasonable amount for people to buy - when 1 stock is worth $100 it makes the "minimum buy-in" very high. If the stock is split 1:10, the share price drops by 10x but all shareholders get 10x more share, so it doesn't affect them much.

    Ultimately listed companies work for shareholders' benefit.

  • If the restaurant advertises all-you-can-EAT condiments then it would be within my rights to stuff myself silly on ketchup. But filling my pockets would be against their terms. Similarly, if they advertised "as many ketchup packets as you can take home for $5", they can't cry to me when I bring home their whole supply of ketchup packets.

    Similarly, if Dropbox is offering unlimited personal storage, they'd be well within their rights to ban me if I resold it. But using to store 20TB of my own shit is me doing exactly what they advertised.

  • It depends on the ToS. DDoSing might be considered unreasonable use.

    But if you're using VPS to stream 4K content 24/7, that would be heavy and reasonable use.

    Similarly, if I take the unlimited Dropbox plan and resell it, that's probably against the ToS.

    If I'm uploading 50TB of blu ray rips for backups, that's... Heavy use but entirely acceptable based on what they're advertising.