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mea_rah @ mea_rah @lemmy.world Posts 0Comments 177Joined 2 yr. ago
I think it's important to point out, that "winning elections" does not mean that the majority of Slovaks support them. They just won as a party with most votes. (23% so not even a quarter)
They just won the mandate to form a government for which they'll need at least two other parties to form a majority. The anti EU/NATO stance might be a problem here as it's not universally shared among possible coalition partners.
It is misleading to draw such a strong "Slovakia is pro-russian country" conclusion based on a single party getting the most votes, because many of the other parties that are at the very least silent if not outright pro-nato/eu with significant amount of the votes.
Even comparison to Hungary is a huge stretch as Orbán's party alone got more than 50% of the votes. As it is now, Smer has to form a coalition with other (in many ways more moderate) parties which is already not 100% given - it would not be the first time when the winning party ends up in opposition. And going forward they either avoid these friction points (so they end up acting more moderate) or they risk coalition breaking apart with early election or opposition forming government.
Yeah, I was saying "no reason" in the context of SAAS. Once the management falls on the end user, it's a different beast altogether.
I think we're trying to say the same in a different way actually. 😅
"If" being the key word here. There are nuances to be considered. One DB might run really well on arm, the other not so much.
I'm saying it as huge fan of the arm servers. They are amazing and often save a lot of money essentially for free. (practically only a few characters change in terraform) In AWS with the hosted services (Opensearch, and such) there's usually no good reason to pay extra for x86 hardware especially since most of the intricacies are handled by AWS.
But there are workloads that just do not run on arm all that well and you would end up paying more for the HW to get to the performance levels you had with x86.
And that's beside all those little pain points mentioned above that you're "left to deal with" which isn't cheap either. (but that doesn't show up on the AWS bill, so management is happy to report cost savings)
I'm not sure where this idea of high profile target comes from. The sim swap attack is pretty common. People just need to be in some credentials leak DB with some hint of crypto trading or having some somewhat interesting social media account. (either interesting handle or larger number of followers)
There are now organized groups that essentially provide sim swap as a service. Sometimes employees of the telco company are in on it. The barrier to entry is not that high, so the expected reward does not need to be that much higher.
Laws across Europe are not uniform. Last time I've checked, there were a couple of countries where downloading for personal use was not illegal.
IIRC Spain, Poland were such countries? Maybe Switzerland? That's on top of countries where it's technically illegal but not enforced.
There are probably more countries around the world with similar laws or with no laws regulating downloads. But I'm on my phone so can't look it up.
Feel free to correct me.
I think their point was that there are countries where piracy (or circumventing copy protection) isn't illegal and only copyright laws exist. Thus downloading pirated stuff isn't inherently illegal.
In some countries the copy protection removal isn't dealt with in any way and thus it's not inherently forbidden, in some it's actually outright permitted by law in some situations. (personal use, education,..) Same applies to tools for copy protection circumvention.
So is the bot not pointing out obvious lies with links to factual data or what is your point? Can you link me to an example of bot using shaky arguments?
And the WMD claims stood on shaky legs from very beginning, many countries like Germany opposed use of force in Iraq. Perhaps we'd benefit from bot correcting false narratives in real time had this technology been available at the time.
Have you seen any tweet this bot generated that would contain misinformation? Because I haven't.
What is the context for Iraq WMDs? I haven't seen it anywhere in the article?
Nothing to worry folks, here's what NSO said when it was used to target Khashoggi's inner circle as he was murdered and dismembered in the Saudi consulate:
NSO denies any wrongdoing. It says the software is intended for use against criminals and terrorists and is made available only to military, law enforcement and intelligence agencies from countries with good human rights records
I think you make a good point. Most of these companies have cut out some portion of the streaming market. YouTube just happens to have a slice of market that's quite huge.
I'd say it's more likely that we'll see some competition in some niche that's currently served by YouTube rather than complete YouTube replacement.
In Tailscale you can set up an exit node which lets you access the entire internet via its internet connection.
You could set up an exit node that would let you access the internet via some (anonymizing) VPN providers like Mullvad or any other.
This sounds like Tailscale is simply setting up this exit node for Mullvad on their side and providing it as a service. So it's not like using another VPN anonymizers is impossible, it's just convenient to use Mullvad.
The working in the article is a bit confusing:
was charged with justifying terrorism and refused to plead guilty
To me this sounds like he was charged with justifying terrorism, not for refusing to plead guilty. Reading further the charge is based on "conversations with other inmates during which Miftakhov allegedly expressed support for a 2018 attack on a regional office of Russia's Federal Security Service". In reasonable legal system it would stand on very shaky legs given the other inmates have every reason to say whatever FSB told them to say otherwise they will be tortured as well. But this is russia.
Which is to say he wasn't really charged for refusing to plead guilty, but in practice the FSB can just keep making up false charges and torturing him until he pleads guilty, so there's very little difference. It might as well be an offense as you implied.
Interesting. I wonder what were the circumstances. The wording on their page is quite vague as for when they'd might require this identification:
Where a booking appears to have been made through a third-party travel agent who has no commercial relationship with Ryanair
I generally avoid Ryanair where I can, but I flew with them many times before and never had this issue. They were one of the first airlines I encountered that required login to purchase tickets, so this is all in line with their behavior.
I think this is just Ryanair trying to discourage 3rd party ticket sales more than anything else. They have always been very hostile towards that option. Of you want to fly Ryanair, buy directly from them, from my experience the prices are the same anyways and there's no face id required.
As for the €55 airport check-in fee, that definitely goes to Ryanair. They are just famous for trying to extract as much money post-sale as possible. It has nothing to do with the identification, it's just Ryanair not having free check-in on airport. I don't think your face has €55 value to them, it's the other way around. Using the airport check-in is kind of last resort option (for example when you didn't do the online check-in on time) and they know that customer would be in desperate enough situation to pay that much to fly.
The topic of 'NATO expansion' was never discussed; it was not raised in those years. I am saying this with a full sense of responsibility. Not a single Eastern European country brought up the issue, not even after the Warsaw Pact had ceased to exist in 1991. -- Gorbachev
So yeah this is another case of russia bending history to fuel their victim complex.
There are nazis everywhere. But people buying into the initial russian propaganda, that they were invading to stop nazis in Ukraine, forget that in russian newspeak "nazi" is anyone opposing russian interests. We laugh when they talk about "Jewish Nazis", but translated from russian newspeak this is not as contradictory.
The moment putin tries to do nuclear attack, he's dead. Zelensky said it well, that putin spent most of the invasion in some bunker, before that he had this thing with ridiculously long tables being super paranoid about covid. He's clearly not planning to die.
Also I think it helps to imagine the details. How would the nuclear attack look like? How would it prevent Crimea "falling"? What would be the breaking point? It's not like there would be some clear change from Ukraine not touching Crimea to full on liberation. Ukraine is bombing military targets in Crimea even now. They are even conducting operations on Crimean soil right now. They hit the Kerch bridge multiple times already. Why press the button after 4th or 7th bridge hit and not after first?
Also it's not like he can't sell this defeat as victory. The way things are going there's probably a lot of people in russia prepared to pretend that there was glorious victory after heroic attack towards russian border. There will be interviews in the Moscow streets with people praising the successful special military operation, because they know that if it continued few more months, there would be conscription in Moscow.
RAID is not backup. RAID is used for increased capacity, throughput or uptime. (Depending on configuration)
Multiple volumes would likely get corrupted just as much with faulty RAM as RAID would. Besides RAM there's controller, CPU, power supply and possibly more single points of failure in that NAS, that would destroy both RAID and multiple volumes.
So assuming you have external backup, I'd go with RAID for better uptime as opposed to some custom multi volume pseudo-RAID for the same.
I feel like putin is just trying to put off the biggest fire at the moment. Any knock on effects are problems to be dealt by future putin. (or someone else) He's losing control and usual flight from the 15th story window (remember, there were many of those recently) is no longer cutting it so he needed to send a stronger message even if it means future problems.
I think they might be talking about manual configuration. Some systems let you configure DNS separately from IP configuration. (So you could set up custom DNS while using DHCP) With some you'd have to set static IP as well, which might not be convenient but also possible.