

Yeah, but what about New York? Their implementation of the law is arguably more egregious, requiring actual ID verification for anything with an internet connection.


Yeah, but what about New York? Their implementation of the law is arguably more egregious, requiring actual ID verification for anything with an internet connection.


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At the time, Wayland lacked the capacity to even pass keystrokes from one application to another, let alone track mouse movements. I’m sure everything else was tracked, but mouse activity was not something they were capable of watching.


On this site, they are one and the same. Judging from the website, though, it’s just a conference about Ruby on Rails.


As far as I could tell, they weren’t when I worked there. Then again, I was the only person I knew who had a Linux workstation, and one running Wayland at that, so it may have been present on the Mac and Windows machines and I just never knew about it.


I miss the skeuomorphism of the really old versions. I loved that the game center looked like a poker table, for instance.
Why not just block him then?


Sure boss. I’m running pfsense as we speak, so like I said, you can access the public internet just fine with a homemade router.


I assure you there are multiple people on this thread alone that have this setup. It’s not like you somehow can’t access the public internet once you’ve got a homemade router.
I’ll usually whisper “no tears now, only dreams” to my computer when I hard power it off like that.


You could probably spread the exfil across a botnet of some kind, since I imagine the data will survive being chunked.
I think you mean it’s been aged.
I really have to resist the urge to send this to my ex…


Well yeah, nobody wants third degree burns.


I think there’s a free trial of the HiFi version, which is what I have. Sound quality is significantly better than other services, since I’m pretty sure they use FLAC when it’s available, and high-bitrate MP3 (I think) for their low-bandwidth mode. Either way, their lowest-quality encoding settings are better than Spotify’s old top-tier ones.


It does, though it’s not exactly front and center on certain apps. For instance, in my car, I had to scroll most of the way down the main screen to find the radio stations. They are very good, though. They give a decent mix of stuff you’ve favorited and things you’ve never heard before, with the notable exception of the Steven Wilson radio station, which plays almost exclusively bands that Steven Wilson has been in, which alone is more than enough to fill up a whole radio station.


Yeah, but that money actually goes to the artists. It’s got one of the best rates for that out of all the streaming services.


Tidal is quite good for music. The selection is missing stuff at times, but that usually doesn’t last long since I’m pretty sure that only happens when there’s some kind of contract renegotiation or something.
Hangry