[-] jsdz@lemmy.ml 70 points 1 year ago

You might think that things have changed over the years, but I was around in 1995 and I can assure you this looked exactly as ridiculous then as it does now.

[-] jsdz@lemmy.ml 80 points 1 year ago

It's a bank! It's a dating app! It's a video hosting service, a town square, a shopping mall, a floor wax AND a dessert topping! Why go anywhere else? Just stare at the middle of the big shiny X until it makes sense!

[-] jsdz@lemmy.ml 97 points 1 year ago

She would have expected people to name figures such as Quintus Lollius Urbicus, who became governor of Roman Britain

Look, I know everyone in Britain is required to know the names and dates of all the monarchs going back to the 9th century, but expecting everyone to be able to come up with that name when put on the spot is going a little too far.

[-] jsdz@lemmy.ml 67 points 1 year ago

vastly expands the pool of potential victims

I'm not brave enough at the moment to say it isn't some kind of crime, but creating such images (as opposed to spamming them everywhere, using them for blackmail, or whatever) doesn't seem to be a crime that involves any victims.

[-] jsdz@lemmy.ml 68 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I tried to submit it to addons.mozilla.org but they didn’t accept it.

It sort of looks as if they did accept it. If they were hesitant, perhaps it has something to do with the description suggesting that it's a broken and pointless temporary kludge, as well as calling Firefox "removed", and the ridiculously irrelevant screenshot.

I didn't realise it was that easy to build a simple firefox extension like that. Maybe I'll modify it to disable the whole clipboard api and some other stuff.

[-] jsdz@lemmy.ml 145 points 1 year ago

I've just noticed that this is in c/piracy. I suppose there's lots of interest in the story here and everywhere else, but I'd just like to remind you all that ad-blocking is not piracy.

[-] jsdz@lemmy.ml 90 points 1 year ago

Spoiler: It's 0.1 tonnes of CO2e per subscriber per year. This is not mentioned in the article.

This includes for example the emissions generated in the course of constructing the rockets that launch the satellites. So far it's unclear to me whether, when comparing to terrestrial telecom, they include e.g. the emissions produced when manufacturing the trucks that deploy the infrastructure.

[-] jsdz@lemmy.ml 165 points 1 year ago

I'm pretty sure the main system startup bottleneck is me typing the disk encryption passphrase.

[-] jsdz@lemmy.ml 79 points 1 year ago

Sort of. They can still see which IP address you're connecting to, which by itself or in combination with some minor traffic analysis is quite often enough to identify which website you've visited. Perhaps it isn't if the website puts absolutely everything through a giant CDN like Cloudflare, but in that case it's Cloudflare which gets to see all the sites you visit which isn't a whole lot better than the status quo.

Still, it's a little less information given away at least some of the time. Better to do it than not do it.

172
submitted 1 year ago by jsdz@lemmy.ml to c/firefox@lemmy.ml

Mozilla seems to be asleep at the wheel, when it once drove online activity and communications. We have some suggestions where it could go.

62
submitted 1 year ago by jsdz@lemmy.ml to c/nottheonion@lemmy.world

Steve talks about the critical importance of product content and the role it plays in whether consumers abandon their shopping carts, make a purchase, or return a product. In fact, 70% of online shoppers say product content can make or break a sale.

[-] jsdz@lemmy.ml 114 points 1 year ago

It's a good thing Apple doesn't make cars. They'd put the gas pedal on the left just to be different, and claim it's more "natural" that way.

34
submitted 1 year ago by jsdz@lemmy.ml to c/skyrimmods@lemmy.world

I like small mods that make a big difference. It's simply a better Magelight that comes in various colours. If you've got lighting mods that make dark places really dark, it's all the more useful. I like the red one, since it looks okay and a backyard astronomer long ago told me that red is the colour to use to avoid spoiling your night vision.

It may require a bug fix or two if you want to put down large numbers of lights everywhere, such as along the roads as you travel at night in the fog at new moon. I think it was possibly the Community Shaders "light limit fix" which made that work for me.

But even without that, it's nice to be able to stick a few long-lasting colourful lights on the ceiling in the course of a dungeon crawl to light up a big area when your cover is blown and you want to see what's going on, and to mark where you've been. Or depending on other lighting settings, just make it possible to see who you're talking to in the Ragged Flagon. It changed Magelight from something I never bothered using to one of my most-used spells.

[-] jsdz@lemmy.ml 84 points 1 year ago

I'm not usually much of a conspiracy theorist, but damned if it doesn't look a little like what might happen if a powerful cabal of billionaires was making concerted efforts to use their political influence to lock down the remaining parts of the world where people have some degree of liberty in order to prepare for installing the authoritarian fascism they think will keep them safe in the coming apocalypse.

19
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by jsdz@lemmy.ml to c/privacy@lemmy.ml

California's attempt to force "age verification" on us all is having legal problems.

"Based on the materials before the Court, the CAADCA’s age estimation provision appears not only unlikely to materially alleviate the harm of insufficient data and privacy protections for children, but actually likely to exacerbate the problem by inducing covered businesses to require consumers, including children, to divulge additional personal information."

52
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by jsdz@lemmy.ml to c/skyrimmods@lemmy.world

I've installed a dozen more mods and am starting out in Skyrim once again. I can't remember any other one that's made a bigger difference than this. Finally my personal version of Skyrim has forests that feel like real forests, where you can't see all that far a lot of the time and it'd be easy to get lost if you didn't have a compass.

Sure, that is achieved by making the trees fantastically big and closer together than you'd expect for such giants, but it makes sense to me and it looks great from ground level when you're in the woods. There's obviously less gravity on Nirn judging from how high I can jump carrying a 200kg backpack, so why shouldn't the trees grow bigger? The only problem I've seen so far is that wild animals occasionally have trouble navigating, such as an elk that just ran headfirst into a tree instead of going anywhere. But they do that kind of thing sometimes in pure vanilla Skyrim as well.

It's just beautiful. I prefer "mythic" mode. It's what I always wanted in a video game forest.

[-] jsdz@lemmy.ml 72 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

So they've decided that this part of the bill will be unenforceable and useless, but they plan to go ahead and pass it anyway. I suppose they'll soon need to do the same for the age verification nonsense as well.

They still want to impose these ill-conceived laws on us so as to appear to have done something, but the people who had somehow been convinced that this would do some good will be disappointed. If they stick with this course, they will soon have managed the impressive political feat of pleasing exactly nobody with the results of this excruciating years-long process of counterproductive legislating.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by jsdz@lemmy.ml to c/patientgamers@sh.itjust.works

I never did get any of the DLC when I played it on the PS3. Finally I will get to experience the horse armor.

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jsdz

joined 1 year ago