[-] mikezila@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 1 year ago

I've used it on probably 10+ windows systems that I've had to refresh/set up for various needs and people. I've never had it fail on any flavor of 10/11.

[-] mikezila@lemmy.dbzer0.com 24 points 1 year ago

It's a little longwinded and meandering, but it's a good piece and a good message. This is why things like Linux and opensource are so important. On the surface it looks like a bunch of nerds making our computers slightly more of a hassle to use and slightly less compatible with everything else, but maintaining full control of what our systems do, what other system's they talk to, and maintaining a chain of accountability that goes all the way to the hardware is so important. Sadly it's important in ways that the average person doesn't care much about, or rather they won't care about them until it's too late. Until every computer for sale everywhere is just a surveillance device shaped like a laptop that plays youtube and opens facebook while logging and sending off every click and keystroke.

Now I'm all fired up. I'm going to go install Linux on an old thinkpad.

[-] mikezila@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Arc browser

What's so cool about it? Not being a smartass I'm genuinely interested. Their website is cagey and their youtube is talking heads and fluff.

[-] mikezila@lemmy.dbzer0.com 7 points 1 year ago

To be fair I only do work from a work computer, and my work computer already has a ton of shit on it I'd never use in my personal life.

[-] mikezila@lemmy.dbzer0.com 24 points 1 year ago

It's especially rough when you remember seeing it on the internet before and even had it yourself at one point. There are/were a bunch of music artists I discovered at both the old eMusic and the music section of old download.com, but those collections weren't archived anywhere in any meaningful way when the sites changed. It took me years to finally locate what I was after. It's just so draining to know that something used to easily and freely available and to not be able to find it no matter how hard to dig.

[-] mikezila@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 1 year ago

Yeah, but if your boss or client sends you a document that doesn't work you're not going to tell them "Uh well this is a badly formed document and you shouldn't embed scripts and it's your fault that my FOSS alternative application can't work with this". At least I hope you're not.

[-] mikezila@lemmy.dbzer0.com 25 points 1 year ago

So do I call her Mother or Goddess.

The game was rigged from the start.

[-] mikezila@lemmy.dbzer0.com 46 points 1 year ago

Maybe I'm missing context, but the article doesn't mention what this admission looked like. Was it just a use saying "yeah I downloaded the new ghostbusters movie, it sucked glad I didn't pay for it", or was it someone admitting to camming/distributing/facilitating piracy at a base level? Surely they are not going after someone for just casually mentioning they pirated a movie?

[-] mikezila@lemmy.dbzer0.com 10 points 1 year ago

Try what? Add some pointless solder to a disk and then what? Wait years to see how long it takes to die? How many do I need for a sample size? Do I need to test the same model? What about workloads the drives should be under?

This is pure untestable unverifiable snake oil.

[-] mikezila@lemmy.dbzer0.com 11 points 1 year ago

I ran a cgiproxy instance with proper ssl certs that totally bypassed and trivialized the school's internet filter. It was password protected with unique passwords per user and I had it set up in such a way I could tell when a password "got out" and I'd cancel it. It got added to the blocklist a couple times, but I was ready because I'd already registered like 20 dynamic dns services to point to the server. It would take them months to add it to the manual blocklist but just a minute to change a link on my forum so people used the next address in line. It was an open secret that I was running it, but I was pretty smart in how I ran it and who I provided access to. I also ran a forum that was popular with the student body and the passwords to the proxy were given out there, but only to people I trusted and could reasonably deduce who they were. Even then they didn't know it was me running the whole thing.

I mean most people probably did, but again I did it in such a way there was never any real paper trail. I never made any money or wanted any clout for it. I just thought it was fun that I got pissed off at the internet filter blocking newgrounds one day and thought "absolutely not", and basically trivialized the filter schoolwide.

[-] mikezila@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 1 year ago

What will the community do then? Carry on. There's always a new hotshot waiting in the wings. This cycle has been going on since before I was born and it'll continue long after I'm dead. There will always be new cats and new mice in the scene.

[-] mikezila@lemmy.dbzer0.com 14 points 1 year ago

I've never heard of a Steam ban for running a pirated game that uses cracked steam_api.dll. The whole point of the cracked .dll is that it doesn't communicate with Steam anymore.

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mikezila

joined 1 year ago