It’s been two months sir
[He/Him, Nosist, Touch typist, Enthusiast, Superuser impostorist, keen-eyed humorist, endeavourOS shillist, kotlin useist, wonderful bastard, professinal pedant miser]
Stuped person says stuped things, people boom
Maybe migrating to kbin.melroy.org
It’s been two months sir
I meant that the Japanese use the Chinese word for Pomelo to call the Yuzu
TIL The Japanese call Yuzu what we (the Chinese) call the Pomelo
Credit: DALL-E 3 / Microsoft Designer
na na-na-na na na, na na, na na na na nana!
It’s not just torrenting. Every user chooses what files they share, and these would be visible in search (and ranked by an internet speed transfer estimate), which makes discoverability a whole lot easier. If you want to download it, a direct transfer is initiated between that user and you computer only. You can also browse all files that a user has shared and chat with them about problems and whatnot (there also are chat rooms). Plus, since it’s not really torrenting apart from the concept, your download history isn’t targeted by popular tools that check out your activity on public trackers.
Dunno about you, but “Starknet” sounds like that comic arc where Iron Man gets a venomous suit and enshittifies life.
To combine the comments would probably require a revision to the lemmy protocol, plus an even bigger one to the backend software to keep backwards compatibility
…is that seriously your reason? Do you know about how Codeberg displayed something about a javascript error on top of that website for months? Mistakes happen, and as long as they have backup plans I don’t see how that is an issue.
Why does nobody ever recommend GitLab
Soulseek
Maybe try tapping on the text?
Still don’t get the stigma by association… as long as there’s no evidence of changes we’ll be fine
The Waterfox blog post doesn’t mention it, and you’d need to change userChrome.css to do that atm. Personally I use TreeStyleTab as my primary tab view.
What’s auto hiding?
(note, the GitLab Enterprise Edition, which is provided to the public on gitlab.com, is (like GitHub) trade-secret, proprietary, vendor-lock-in software)
Isn’t EE source-available but proprietary? Plus if you just use the free tier you’re not using any enterprise features
Why is it a fiddle
I think you’re confused. There is no warning letter, that’s just the takedown notice sent at the same time as the takedown.