You can't perform HTTP requests from a pure function without making it obvious in its signature that it does side effects. For example in a language like Haskell: add : Int -> Int -> Int add x y = x + y There is no way…
We should switch to using pure functional languages by default. Most of the packages don't need to do any side effects and only perform pure calculations. In a pure functional language it is obvious from function…
You don't need to invest if you just want to use it.
I'm on desktop, using Firefox, and it's just an empty page with a red border at the top for me.
>You know, you can always do a bank transfer. Lol. In my country there is no easy way to do an international bank transfer. Crypto is literally the only solution I can imagine if I want to donate a few bucks to a FOSS…
Yes.
As long as you don't have a unique IP address, this data doesn't seem enough to uniquely identify you. HTTP headers reveal your OS and browser, but not much more than that, and they should be mostly the same for all…
A closed-source browser is unacceptable from security/privacy point of view. Use a non-free license, but open the code.
You can't perform HTTP requests from a pure function without making it obvious in its signature that it does side effects. For example in a language like Haskell: add : Int -> Int -> Int add x y = x + y There is no way…
We should switch to using pure functional languages by default. Most of the packages don't need to do any side effects and only perform pure calculations. In a pure functional language it is obvious from function…
You don't need to invest if you just want to use it.
I'm on desktop, using Firefox, and it's just an empty page with a red border at the top for me.
>You know, you can always do a bank transfer. Lol. In my country there is no easy way to do an international bank transfer. Crypto is literally the only solution I can imagine if I want to donate a few bucks to a FOSS…
Yes.
As long as you don't have a unique IP address, this data doesn't seem enough to uniquely identify you. HTTP headers reveal your OS and browser, but not much more than that, and they should be mostly the same for all…
A closed-source browser is unacceptable from security/privacy point of view. Use a non-free license, but open the code.