• 0 Posts
  • 59 Comments
Joined 11 months ago
cake
Cake day: July 10th, 2024

help-circle

  • I think about this probably every month.

    “Any community that gets its laughs by pretending to be idiots will eventually be flooded by actual idiots who mistakenly believe that they’re in good company.”

    I used to read hilarious shit on r/sinkpissers as most people were joking. Kinda like the sub about drunk driving. It slowly evolved though. Last time I used Reddit almost all of the new posts on r/sinkpissers were serious and involved actual pissing in the sink.



  • Asymmetrical abs is common.

    It’s genetic and not that visible on most people. It’s also not dangerous in any way as the muscles are still able to do their job just fine. As a result it doesn’t get much attention.

    You can still easily find examples though. If you for example go on DDG and search for images of “bodybuilder abs” you’ll get stuff like what I got as result number 5, result number 6, result number 9 and more.








  • This year I’ve gotten about four that match what you describe. Before that I got maybe ten that were supposed to look like just normal people. Some of them often followed eachother.

    They have all been on mastodon.social, which is what I first noticed and found weird. Personally I’m on a small and niche server being run by a dude in his garage. I barely have any followers and don’t post much. There’s not many ways to just randomly discover me on Mastodon.




  • In practice, yes. IF IMPLEMENTED PROPERLY it would be extremely unlikely for an attacker to get in.

    For example with a proper implementation of TOTP it would require an attacker to guess the correct number between 0 and 999999 in less than half a minute. Most services make you wait a little bit (often less than humans notice) between attempts and don’t allow infinite attempts, so an attacker would have to be unimaginably lucky.

    There are sadly lots of huge companies that DON’T IMPLEMENT 2FA PROPERLY. Sony Entertainment (account for PlayStation) for example. So a unique and long password is still important.





  • DoidFS can use the camera to take photos and record video. It gets stored in the vault instead of your camera roll. This ensures that other apps never get access to the photo/video, even if they have “all-files access”.

    Several other apps does some version of this. If you have tried to export a photo from Signal to your camera roll, you have probably seen this before.

    DroidFS does not ask for camera permission unless you try to use this feature. The app does not need the camera for anything else, so if you don’t allow it to use the camera everything else still works.