I’m here!
Disabling IPv4 isn’t going to do anything to move IPv6 forward. You’re just shutting those who remain limited to IPv4 through no fault of their own.
Lemmy, itself, does NOT collect or store IP addresses. You won’t find this information in the Lemmy database/application.
However, your IP address will be captured in the webserver logs themselves, which is typical for any connections to any webserver.
In addition to the reasons already mentioned, Apple has a requirement that applications have a novel component. While it’s often questionable as to what is considered “novel” Weather applications get contrasted against the built-in weather app. If the app simply duplicates the functionality it will be rejected.
True dat. I’ve been running it about seven weeks and am pulling about 700 communities. Most have near zero traffic but the high volume ones do add up.
42G /mnt/sp4dot1-data/appdata/mylemmy.win/
12G /mnt/sp4dot1-data/appdata/mylemmy.win/postgres
30G /mnt/sp4dot1-data/appdata/mylemmy.win/pictrs
I use Lemmy Community Seeder. Every four hours it checks the top posts on instances you specifies and automatically subscribes you to communities that appear there but you aren’t already subscribed to. You can tweak it to ignore specific communities or instances.
Everybody is virtuous and brave when it’s not their ass on the line.
As an administrator of many different public-facing services I’m always going to defend other admins right to moderate their services in whatever manner makes them comfortable, even if I don’t agree with their decision.
Lemmy isn’t one place. It’s hundred of independent places across the globe that communicate with each other. Each subject to the laws where they are hosted, the laws where they provide service and the judgements of their independent administrators.
For me it was $24 for a new oven igniter. That was three weeks ago and it hasn’t worn off, yet.
Instead of embracing open standards they made Metal.
Did DirectX become an open standard when I wasn’t paying attention?
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And prevents people from doing stupid things, as well as prevents malware running under administrator permissions from doing malware things (see also; people doing stupid things).
The drive doesn’t have a say. The permissions surrounding the TrustedInstaller account have a say. The account existed on your first Windows install and also on your new one hence the permissions and associated restrictions persevere. This is expected behavior.
Nearly 30 years of LINUX experience. I can definitely say on a regular basis that LINUX doesn’t do exactly what I want.
I can see wanting to run your own DNS to serve personal clients for privacy purposes but for self-hosting class stuff I can think of plenty of downsides and zero upsides to privatizing this.
Definitely a “yeah, you could” vs. “yeah, you should” situation.
You should’ve read what 1956(7)(b) is… money laundering.
There was deemed enough evidence that the site was tied to money laundering to execute a forfeiture.
That’s it.
Because nobody has written the code to make it “not function like that”.