>This problem is solved in China It isn't. China is the best example that draconian identity verification / KYC processes don't stop scammers.
I agree. In case you haven't heard of it already https://tldr.sh is pretty good for this.
>We can say a lot of things about what may happen next, but the main one is that AI is going to get better with scale. Could anyone elaborate on this? Further down he talks about the necessity of bringing the cost of…
>it means that it's impossible to download public data from a web app without proxying it through your own server. Maybe with a subdomain that points to the target website IP? If it supports HTTP and doesn't check the…
I'm surprised to read that "the scientific wisdom of the time (...) held that there were no significant elemental differences between the Sun and Earth", because I distinctly remember looking up why helium was named…
I don't think I've ever bitten into a pear or plum with "unappetizingly soft or gristly bits".
Instead of collecting more data why don't do something with the data we already have? A quick look at the Fedora Bugzilla or the GNOME GitLab issues tab suggests the bottleneck doesn't lie in data collection, but in…
I get results for the Bible book when I search for "book of megadrive". Genesis and Megadrive are different names for the same SEGA console. Master System is a different console altogether. What would you say is the…
Post-WW2 Germany comes to mind.
Many phishing lists don't treat github.io as a pseudo-TLD which leads to the entirety of *.github.io being blacklisted when someone uses Github Pages to host phishing or malware.
I'm sure many people do. There are tons of apps to scan and parse invoices. Makes sense as the current mid range phone cameras work just as well as mid range scanners but don't take any space and do that job an order of…
The ones with fish are great.
There are some experiments that suggest that human actions are not the result of conscious thought. Maybe you've heard about Michael Gazzaniga's experiments on split brain subjects. The most radical interpretation of…
I apologize for the double negative. What I meant is that hashing doesn't improve privacy because if you know the hash and the hashing function it's easy to build a hashmap of all the possible IPv4s (around 3.5B).…
>hash the IP-address How would that work? I can't think of any approach where getting the original IP back from the hash isn't trivial.
I think it may be Noto Sans Mono. >I tried whatthefont Has that website ever worked for anyone?
I'd say it's the last one, with a "subcommand based position dependant syntax" like git or zfs. It's a matter of taste but personally I prefer it to the traditional one. As long as the behavior is consistent remembering…
>But start bringing in cars and trucks and see it crumble in a week There are some Roman bridges that still get automobile traffic (Römerbrücke, Puente Alcántara) or were only recently pedestrianized (Puente Romano).…
I always thought these types of services didn't go after account sharing as a form of flexible pricing. The users who are OK paying $10/mo pay that. The users who wouldn't pay $10 share an account and get a slightly…
>if you see a honey bee in your back yard, there's a pretty good chance that somebody owns it. This is true even in Europe. If memory serves the percentage of "wild" honeybees (feral may be a more fitting adjective) is…
Add French to the list (unlocking the rest of Africa) and you have the 6 official languages of the United Nations.
For some reason we had something like common core math in my elementary school in the early 2000s and I just had a traumatic flashback. Teacher forced us do EVERY sum like this: 17890 + 456 = 1 x 10000 + 7 x 1000 + 8 x…
Losing is the real challenge. >I'm sorry, but I cannot provide you with this option. Putting more ads to make up for the lost user base would likely worsen your reputation and lead to even more users leaving your site.…
Not a distributed filesystem but syncthing can easily do what you're asking for.
Does it work for apps with pinned certs?
>This problem is solved in China It isn't. China is the best example that draconian identity verification / KYC processes don't stop scammers.
I agree. In case you haven't heard of it already https://tldr.sh is pretty good for this.
>We can say a lot of things about what may happen next, but the main one is that AI is going to get better with scale. Could anyone elaborate on this? Further down he talks about the necessity of bringing the cost of…
>it means that it's impossible to download public data from a web app without proxying it through your own server. Maybe with a subdomain that points to the target website IP? If it supports HTTP and doesn't check the…
I'm surprised to read that "the scientific wisdom of the time (...) held that there were no significant elemental differences between the Sun and Earth", because I distinctly remember looking up why helium was named…
I don't think I've ever bitten into a pear or plum with "unappetizingly soft or gristly bits".
Instead of collecting more data why don't do something with the data we already have? A quick look at the Fedora Bugzilla or the GNOME GitLab issues tab suggests the bottleneck doesn't lie in data collection, but in…
I get results for the Bible book when I search for "book of megadrive". Genesis and Megadrive are different names for the same SEGA console. Master System is a different console altogether. What would you say is the…
Post-WW2 Germany comes to mind.
Many phishing lists don't treat github.io as a pseudo-TLD which leads to the entirety of *.github.io being blacklisted when someone uses Github Pages to host phishing or malware.
I'm sure many people do. There are tons of apps to scan and parse invoices. Makes sense as the current mid range phone cameras work just as well as mid range scanners but don't take any space and do that job an order of…
The ones with fish are great.
There are some experiments that suggest that human actions are not the result of conscious thought. Maybe you've heard about Michael Gazzaniga's experiments on split brain subjects. The most radical interpretation of…
I apologize for the double negative. What I meant is that hashing doesn't improve privacy because if you know the hash and the hashing function it's easy to build a hashmap of all the possible IPv4s (around 3.5B).…
>hash the IP-address How would that work? I can't think of any approach where getting the original IP back from the hash isn't trivial.
I think it may be Noto Sans Mono. >I tried whatthefont Has that website ever worked for anyone?
I'd say it's the last one, with a "subcommand based position dependant syntax" like git or zfs. It's a matter of taste but personally I prefer it to the traditional one. As long as the behavior is consistent remembering…
>But start bringing in cars and trucks and see it crumble in a week There are some Roman bridges that still get automobile traffic (Römerbrücke, Puente Alcántara) or were only recently pedestrianized (Puente Romano).…
I always thought these types of services didn't go after account sharing as a form of flexible pricing. The users who are OK paying $10/mo pay that. The users who wouldn't pay $10 share an account and get a slightly…
>if you see a honey bee in your back yard, there's a pretty good chance that somebody owns it. This is true even in Europe. If memory serves the percentage of "wild" honeybees (feral may be a more fitting adjective) is…
Add French to the list (unlocking the rest of Africa) and you have the 6 official languages of the United Nations.
For some reason we had something like common core math in my elementary school in the early 2000s and I just had a traumatic flashback. Teacher forced us do EVERY sum like this: 17890 + 456 = 1 x 10000 + 7 x 1000 + 8 x…
Losing is the real challenge. >I'm sorry, but I cannot provide you with this option. Putting more ads to make up for the lost user base would likely worsen your reputation and lead to even more users leaving your site.…
Not a distributed filesystem but syncthing can easily do what you're asking for.
Does it work for apps with pinned certs?