

Don’t a large number of US-Americans also have pools? That’s also a big chunk of water.
Hi!
My previous/alt account is yetAnotherUser@feddit.de which will be abandoned soon.


Don’t a large number of US-Americans also have pools? That’s also a big chunk of water.


People don’t realize how easy it is to get local access.
There’s a very good reason you should not run your browser as root.


Isn’t that still just a pick-up truck?
I’ve only ever seen these:

A van but with a flatbed.


That’s why you join private trackers.
My seedbox is easily downloading at 2 Gbit/s. I assume that’s an HDD hardware limit, it’s a shared 40 Gbit connection actually.


Damn, it’s almost like torrenting works exactly the same way.


Changing the TOS is explicitly allowed. You can refuse to accept the changes but then the company has the right to end their relationship with you (i.e. terminate your account).
There are also strict limits. Something like: “Your account may be terminated for any unspecified reason” is illegal, I’m pretty sure.
And the recent DSA of the EU has further limited social media company’s rights to terminate accounts. I believe they must provide a way to fight terminations and listen to your arguments. Other countries may have similar laws but I cannot speak for them.
Banning clickthrough contracts would genuinely break large parts of the internet though. No more online purchases for one, including anything from Steam to Amazon.


It’s much more complicated than that. Social media platforms have a TOS that binds them just as much as the user. It’s literally just a contract.
The social media company also has much more limited rights to terminate such a contract than the user. At least that’s the case in countries with any consumer protection.
That’s how YouTubers at least in Germany have successfully forced YouTube to reinstate their channel. YouTube failed to prove a violation of their TOS, therefore the contract termination was null and void, therefore the contract is still valid.
There is no contract when you have entered a restaurant. After you ordered your food, there is a contract and you cannot be kicked out for arbitrary reasons anymore. If you are kicked out for no reason, you can sue for damages (but you cannot force the restaurant to enter any new contracts with you, e.g. another meal).
Adoption in English speaking countries only. Why is adoption equally terrible internationally if the name is to blame?
Seriously, the ONLY reason I actually know gimp has other meanings is because of discussions of the program.
Worse: If the chosen axioms are contradictory, then the theorem is effectively worthless.
And it is impossible to know whether axioms are consistent. You can only prove that they are not.


The media creates the nazi party’s popularity by the way.
Success is always broadcasted, failure never.
The same way media reports multiple times as often on stock markets losing value than gaining value.


Yeah, that’s again a little different. You have to fully trust WhatsApp that they are doing what they promise. You can’t really verify this yourself.
Besides, if the app is open source, backdoors are generally more difficult to implement. Especially for something like E2EE, where people look very closely at what the application does with keys. Same with age verification in my opinion. You’d need to pull off a lot of gymnastics to put in a backdoor, see the xz utils one which was only achieved through several obfuscated stages in a codebase rarely ever looked at by another human.


Can you explain a little what you mean with:
So they simply scrape post decryption from the user’s device.
As far as I know, no social media company’s posts are E2EE. After all: It’s not possible to have both public posts and E2EE. “Direct messages” to other users can be E2EE but you’d have to trust the company with the encryption keys.
The only condition that requires Zero-Knowledge Protocols to function is that your device is not hijacked by hackers (and there are no deliberate backdoors and such). This can be achieved by having the app be open source with regular security audits. The social media company can do nothing to identify you, nor could the government (unless again, they collude and share secrets).
But yeah, social media can already identify most users because of surveillance capitalism. The goal however is to ensure identification is not in any way made easier via age verification.


You cannot turn a ZKP into being secretely not ZKP without significant effort though.
Take the following example protocol:
The government will not know which social media site was used, the social media site will not discover anything about your identity beyond a binary “is above 18 years old” statement. This is because you control all communication.
To discover anything else, they would BOTH have to collude in some significant way. They can only do so in step 5, by having the social media app send the value you gave it to the government. Maybe there exists a protocol that you control that works against this threat as well, I’m not sure.
But if they collude in step 5 - what prevents the social media company from sending all information it has about you to the government already all the time, even without age verification? Like IP addresses, phone number, access time etc. If the government further controls all the ISP servers and log which traffic from where goes where, it could certainly identify you already.


At the time, Johnson said that the UK lost money under Erasmus as twice as many EU nationals came to the UK to study as British students went elsewhere in Europe.
True, it’s obviously bad to have your universities educate more students and possibly keep them as future researchers. Terrible, really.
The biggest benficiary of Erasmus would obviously be a country whose students all left to study abroad. I can’t see how this would pose a problem whatsoever.


Photos?
I’m fairly certain the app will use the NFC feature of your ID to verify age and only age. Everything else would be a gross violation of privacy, it does not need to store anything else.
Besides, photos only prove possession of an ID card, not ownership. Imagine if an ATM allowed withdrawing funds from a card without having to enter anything. Using the NFC feature requires entering a PIN only the owner should know.


True. I should’ve added: “Without significant foreign support”.
Like no shit, if neighboring countries provides weapons, training and even manpower then it’s hardly considered an uprising, is it? More like a proxy war.
That covers Vietnam, Cambodia and Syria. The latter was literally just a gigantic proxy war. Like look at this shit, this is not a popular uprising:
![]()
Don’t know enough about Iraq, but in Afghanistan the military did jack shit against the Taliban and in Myanmar the military was the one rebelling.
Every single uprising hinged on:
None of them depended on the popular opinion of civilians.


East Germany 1953, Hungary 1956, Czechoslovakia 1968, China 1989.
It does not cause any long-lasting unrest. Crushing protests with tanks is extremely effective and has always worked if the military was called upon and willing.


Full control of everything? It would take at most around 1000 soldiers on the ground to siege a modern a city - shut down water, electricity and close the highways - and you’ll regain control. People don’t like to live without food and water.
Plus no country cares what you do to your own population beyond strongly worded letters and maybe some targeted sanctions against like 3 entities.
Did they actually do anything beyond using goldberg fork? Haven’t heard that “DenuvOwO” ever did anything special, I mean, they even have a Discord server