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  • Why

  • 600 cyber security professionals

    lol. That's a very small number of 'professionals'. Which by the way just means they work in 'security' in some capacity. That doesn't mean they are good at it or know what theyre talking about.

    Why are these articles always crying over a lack AI regulations instead of the massive data collection operations that are allowed to continue collecting data to build their models? The only regulation we need is upholding our fourth amendment rights. But we all know that's never going to happen.

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  • Using piracy as an excuse to exert control over the means of domain resolution.

  • Maemo was BAE

    But we have maemo liste now. Too bad it only supports a few devices (and x86!)

    Theres also sailfish which is based on meego which was supposed to be Nokia's successor to maemo. Sailfish is quite usable and has a decent android app layer, however it only works on certain phones and you need to pay for a license to use android apps

  • It was free making .ml domains good for web development.

    I'm sure @dessalines and @nutomic has a chuckle about it. Definitely a fitting TLD to use, especially for lemmygrad.

  • They were free up until 2023

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.ml

    This part is funny

    Employees for the United States Armed Forces regularly misspell emails—suffixed with the .mil TLD—with .ml. In 2013, Dutch internet entrepreneur Johannes Zuurbier took on the .ml TLD. He attempted to contact the United States government about classified information being sent to army.ml and navy.ml in 2014 through Dutch diplomats.[citation needed] The contents of these emails include crew and staff lists, maps and photos of installations, naval inspection reports, and passwords. Emails that were sent to the .ml TLD include the travel itinerary of chief of staff James McConville on a trip to Indonesia in 2023, information about Kurdistan Workers' Party efforts in the United States, and Australian Department of Defence documents detailing issues with Australian F-35s. On 17 July 2023, Zuurbier's contract expired and control was reverted back to the Malian government.

  • The domain was initially managed by Sotelma, a Malian telecommunications company. After Sotelma was privatised in 2009, the .ml zone was redelegated by IANA to the Agence des Technologies de l’Information et de la Communication (AGETIC), a Malian government agency, and the process completed in 2013.[1] The agency then announced that it would give away .ml domains for free in partnership with Freenom with a view to improve the usage and the knowledge of the IT industry in Mali. It was the first African nation to start giving away domains for free.[2][3][4] The ten-year contract with Freenom expired on 17 July 2023. Since then the registry is operated by AGETIC itself and the free domain offer was discontinued. All paid Freenom .ml domains were migrated to the new system.

  • Why do people keep repeating this? Every time they do someone corrects them but they seem to just assume that's what .ml is without so much as a google search about it.

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  • Theres still an LTE modem in your car sending data somewhere

  • It is nice to see. However, it's not like anything other than *nix will run on rv (for now)

  • What advice

  • No, noobs need to be told what sucks and what doesn't.

  • Except brave doesn't teach them how to block ads or mine crypto so I still fail to see how if they were to switch to brave it would make their switch to a sane browser less painful. They just have to switch twice instead of once.