They could be injecting their own ads or affiliate links into the content.
For example, if a post links to Amazon.
I have not looked at the source code.
They could be injecting their own ads or affiliate links into the content.
For example, if a post links to Amazon.
I have not looked at the source code.
I ended my Zellij eval when I ran into this dangerous bug when Sync and Fullscreen are combined.
It potentially sends commands to a server in a hidden window you can’t see.
https://github.com/zellij-org/zellij/issues/3458
Tmux doesn’t have this problem.
Interesting research project but it’s not Linux and doesn’t natively run Linux apps.
https://www.theregister.com/2024/02/21/successor_to_unix_plan_9/
The story hypes this to be a bit more than this is.
Framework sent a laptop to the lead Mint dev. He’s going to try make sure it works well with Mint, but it already does.
The more low key framing straight on the Mint blog is here:
Rights. Scammers were in the listing before, and AI has helped them appear more trustworthy.
Not sure why people downvoting this news. Any downvoters care to elaborate?
And maybe Control-E too?
Thanks, {{ firstName }}
In well-functioning teams, devs aren’t publicly shamed. We learn and move on.
The peer reviewer, who is often more senior, missed the issue too.
And if there was no peer review, then that’s a process issue, not a personal issue.
“14,250 residents…300,000 condoms”.
So, 20 per resident.
On the other hand, a Garmin Fenix can be easily opened with an inexpensive tool and replacement parts are easily found online.
Although, If I have my own Amazon referral link in my blog post and they replace the referral code in their feed, I would not be happy about that.