

You need a lot of justify the loss of life these wars cause. Putting aside whether they’re justified or not, neither of them meet that threshold.
Genuine question, but has there ever been a war where the expansionist was justified?


You need a lot of justify the loss of life these wars cause. Putting aside whether they’re justified or not, neither of them meet that threshold.
Genuine question, but has there ever been a war where the expansionist was justified?


They’re not invading Russia other than a small little portion a few years after the war started.
Those Nazi battalions would be far less defensible if Russia didn’t pose a credible military threat to Ukraine.


Proton Pass is a valid option.


If you think superhuman AI will kill us, you probably think fluoride will kill us.
If we willingly hand over the nuclear codes to the normalhuman AI though, as I could plausibly foresee a certain Epstein client doing, then AI will kill us all.


Removed by mod


Are people on average replacing their PC every 3 years or something? Mine’s almost 6 years old at this point (ignoring the SSD which is newer, and the GPU which is older).


The heads of the judiciary and foreign affairs committees said in a joint letter to Anandasangaree the bill would “drastically expand Canada’s surveillance and data access powers in ways that create significant cross-border risks to the security and data privacy of Americans.” They said it would allowThey said it would allow “Canadian government officials to compel American companies to build backdoors into their encrypted systems, thereby introducing systemic vulnerabilities that could be exploited by hackers, foreign adversaries, and cybercriminals.”
The spokesperson for the public safety minister said the letter reflects a misunderstanding of how the bill would function.
So do the people who wrote this bill not understand how encryption works, or is the American government staffed by conspiracy theorist nutters?
EDIT: Looked it up and, little bit of both, little bit of neither. It basically bans the idea of “systemically private” services, any privacy needs to be subject to human whims and therefore court orders. Revocable privacy is not privacy.


Fedora and OpenSUSE, primarily.


Regardless, I can’t trust a distro with such a chaotic management structure on security.


Maybe the solution is to just, delete a bunch of kernel modules.
How many of them are actually important anyway?

I have a bidet.
I tried to update CachyOS just now and it couldn’t resolve the domain name.
Swapped out the malware filtering DNS Quad9 for whatever the default DNS is and it worked fine. Sure hope this doesn’t mean anything.


That’s indirect. Not all screen time is entertaining, and not all entertainment is screen time.
But digital devices are by far the most effective at endless entertainment.


The abolition of boredom and what it’s doing to kids’ psyches.


The fact that criticism of this is coming from the LDP, suggests that maybe the best replacement for Keir Starmer probably needs to come from outside the Labor party.


If teleportation machines were mainstream, I don’t think they’d be optional for participating in society.

Surprised India and Pakistan didn’t say eachother. Also surprised South Korea didn’t say North Korea. And is Taiwan treated as a separate state in this data set or not?
I can’t find the original data set but these results don’t match what I found in a quick google search.

It would be interesting to see what Mongolians think, given their geographic position. Mongolia could probably go four different ways.
Iran would pick either America or Israel. North Korea either America or South Korea. New Zealand either America or Australia.

And all of them are right, except Israel (I’m assuming they’re the ones who said Iran).
Any country with nuclear weapons can end the world at the press of a button, or even just with a momentary slip-up.
Yes, we all know history ended in 1991