lemmyingly

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 10 points 21 hours ago (7 children)

It's 100% what professionals do to repair traces. Please don't spread misinformation.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 23 hours ago (11 children)

Just link out the broken trace with a thin wire. This is what the professionals do. The original traces are carbon to reduce manufacturing costs.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago

For some people TeamSpeak didn't go anywhere. I've been using TeamSpeak for the past 5 years as I started communicating with people who never gave it up.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago

Killed it, as in they were awesome and won, or as in unalived. The quote by itself could mean either.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago

I pulled some data off some old Samsung 1TB SSDs that werent powered for 3-4 years without an issue either. I guess they were SLC based on what others are saying.

I guess it's a your mileage may vary situation depending on the exact drive you purchase and probably other factors too.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 weeks ago

Do you acknowledge the questions you haven't answered and state that you'll respond to them at a later time or want another person to chime in?

[–] [email protected] 27 points 3 weeks ago (5 children)

It's called the 'John Hammond attack'. Even though it existed before he added his 2 cents, what you see in your image is his addition.

Watch his video to see him explain it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wm0kqSlyEjE

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 weeks ago

Let's not forget anyone can fly light weight quadcopters and planes with cameras on them within the boundaries of private property. Most aviation authorities around the world are in control of air space, and that air space in most countries starts a micron above the ground. And therefore it's perfectly legal for anyone to fly something within the boundaries of your property. Now you could get into trouble for being a peeping Tom, aggravation, etc depending on the circumstance. But nothing can be done if someone was to do a quick fly over.

In my opinion blurring out street view only protects you against the 'script kiddies' of the stalking/spying world.

One thing about blurring in street view. Once it's done, it cannot be undone. So I'd have consideration for others before going ahead with making a request.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 month ago (4 children)

My submission history looks the same, but I'm not posting about anything political.

I've given up on Reddit. I only lurk on it these days and that's only when Lemmy feels a little stale.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago (2 children)

It could be reasonably innocent. Eg. A student doing a study Lemmy and wants to see where the user base is roughly located. Since Lemmy has many privacy focused people on the platform, I doubt they would get many responses on a survey.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago

I call that negative karma. Low karma is 0-200. 200 because that is a limit that at least some subs would use to limit new accounts from posting.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I'd argue that low karma accounts tend to be new people or lurkers.

 

Is there a method to see which domains were seized, when 3 letter agencies seize them due to piracy.

Within the past month or two, Europol et al seized ~100 IPTV domains. I'm curious to know what these domains were. I've Googled but my Googlefuu isn't good enough.

And I'm curious in general for all piracy related domain seizes.

 

Reddit is removing the 1000 submission/comments limit on user profiles. Profiles will soon show all submissions/comments from the day the account was created.

Reddit is providing a method to delete all content by emailing [email protected] or via their form https://support.reddithelp.com/hc/en-us/requests/new?ticket_form_id=360001370251

The submission link here on Lemmy takes you directly to a Reddit's admin submission that talks about the change.

Edit: typo, use > user Edit2: another typo

 

It looks like there are many submissions now being downvoted across many subs.

Before the API change I never really noticed mass submissions with zero votes. Now i see multiple zero vote submissions daily and I browse Reddit for about 20 minutes a day. My feed is set to sort by hot, so I don't see many submissions that have just been created.

Is this a sign of the type of people using Reddit these days, a lack of moderation, or could there be some bots floating mass downvoting?

 

I've experienced it today where the app doesn't show the comment if I click one of my own comments or the reply to it. It shows the parent comment and other comments in the submission.

I've checked the modlog for the community and neither comment has been removed, so it looks like it's a bug with the app?

 

Is there such a thing as shadow banning submissions, comments, or users on Lemmy?

I'm having trouble seeing a couple of comments that I know were there at some points, one of them is my own and I haven't deleted it. So it got me wondering, is shadow banning a thing here.

 

I've noticed we have bots copy pasting Reddit submissions. Is there a method to block them all?

I assume they mean good by 'generating' content in communities, but I don't see a reason why anyone would comment on them since the OP is on Reddit and will never read them.

I know I can block each individual account as I come across them but I'd just prefer to block them all so I don't see their content at all.

They appear to do the nice thing by adding a line in the submissions about it being an automated submission. Is there a filter for words/phrase found in the body of a submission?

 

I'm interested in looking at newly registered domains for bad actors.

There are services out there that offer zone files for 'all' TLDs but are too expensive for individuals not backed by a company to pick up the bill. I've also found some free lists but they appear to be incomplete.

So I've gone down the route of attempting to obtain zone files or at least newly registered domain lists from TLDs themselves. Obtaining zone files for gTLDs is straight forward with ICANN's CZDS service. But obtaining zone files for ccTLDs appears to be quite interesting. I attempted to Google but couldn't find anything so I've started to email ccTLDs; it already feels like I'm spamming since I'm sending the same email - I've only sent it to 10 TLDs so far. It looks like there are a few hundred ccTLDs.

Is there a better method than emailing each ccTLD and hoping for the best?

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