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If my laptop suspends (?), the graphics get scrambled. Like, I shut the lid, come back a few hours later, and it’s a completely garbled mess. Happens with Wayland; doesn’t happen with X11.
If my laptop suspends (?), the graphics get scrambled. Like, I shut the lid, come back a few hours later, and it’s a completely garbled mess. Happens with Wayland; doesn’t happen with X11.
I love Linux, but I don’t think that Linux users should promote it like it’s a free Windows, because it isn’t. You should learn Linux because you want to learn Linux, not because you hate Windows.
Frankly, I didn’t go 100% Linux right away. I dual-booted for several years first.
They’re all back online now because of articles like this.
Trademark. Not copyright. And the part that is covered is Mickey.
This could also be covered under copyright, since the only Mickey that went into public domain is the one from Steamboat Willie, not this one. I’m not a lawyer, though.
Consensus doesn’t require everyone in the world to agree it just requires the majority to agree
An overwhelming majority, yes. Do you a have a survey or study that demonstrates this?
clearly the majority do otherwise the comment that it’s confusing would not have been made.
This makes no sense. Anybody can make any comment. Just because I say a thing doesn’t mean that the majority agrees with me.
It’s still illegal. This version of Mickey Mouse is still covered under trademark law.
What’s funny is that Disney built their empire largely on public-domain works (such as fairy tales), but when it’s their turn to give back, they fight it tooth and nail. Classic getting to the top and then pulling up the ladder behind you.
It isn’t a consensus, though. If it were, nobody would be debating it.
It seems reasonable to me that you could admire somebody without thinking that they’re a friend or family. That’s what being a fan is. Some of the more extreme fans are going to want to know intimate details about the object of their admiration. I don’t see how it’s different from any other obsessive hobbyist.
I don’t understand your comment, especially the last sentence. Who thinks that celebrities are their friends?
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If meta was to pull the plug on federation it wouldn’t kill ActivityPub, there would still be millions of us here.
It’s not about pulling the plug. It’s about introducing proprietary features that break communication, forcing people off of an independent server and onto Threads.
If most of your IRL friends are on Threads and your experience with them has gotten janky due to Meta fucking with the protocol, it’s going to be very difficult to not switch over to Threads.
Oh, and good luck trying to get your friends to switch over to some indie server they’ve never heard of. If you can do that, then you should run for president.
I’ve always had a password. One of the biggest benefits of Linux is security. Why would you undermine that by not using a password?
Both are open protocols for communication over the Internet. Both have been adopted by a large corporate interest.
Now, how are they different?
“The flood of crap” isn’t what people should be worried about. They should be worried about Meta embracing, extending, and extinguishing the Fediverse. There’s a good article about this here. People are worried about the wrong things and don’t realize what’s at stake.
We’re smarter because we have scientific understanding and rational thinking.
Well, that really puts things in perspective.
At Microsoft, this strategy was called “embrace, extend, extinguish”, but it’s important to realize that it isn’t a practice that’s exclusive to Microsoft.
a lot of the shit he said 13 years ago turned out to be right.
Like what?
Listen to the Knowledge Fight podcast which critiques Alex Jones. He’s wrong a lot.
The article says that this isn’t happening for all users, which indicates that they’re still experimenting with it and haven’t fully rolled it out yet.
At least Thunderbird configs are stored in ~/.config/.mozilla/thunderbird. Right? Right…?