sounds like it’s time to allow third-party clients distribute the server software, shut down free “servers” and offer paid hosting and support. that would cut costs a great deal.
you should know i am earnest. i’m learning how to snark. i try to say what i mean and mean what i say.
sometimes i do try to make jokes, but I am not sarcastic.
sounds like it’s time to allow third-party clients distribute the server software, shut down free “servers” and offer paid hosting and support. that would cut costs a great deal.
>But with others already able to exploit that, why would Proton want to do that?
to comply with a warrant
use the service, and tell them to use it. just like how they made you use discord. and you can whine every time they refuse.
they could ship malicious js to their frontend that would give them access to the unencrypted session. you are going on faith every time you load the interface.
I don’t trust them because they don’t use established security practices and their interfaces abstract away the internals and they have complied with law enforcement and admitted they could compromise contents(not just metadata) and they don’t accept anonymous payment.
they didn’t say threads is transphobic. tehy said threads allows transphobic content
>The Japanese still exist due to the bomb and the Emperor.
nuking two cities is genocide, and it isn’t a favor to the survivors.
>The US would not have stopped without total surrender. That would not have come without massive loss of life.
neither of these statements can be proven.
>Japan surrendered due to the Bomb drops.
we will never know whether they would have surrendered without them on the same time table.
it wasn’t a trolley though, was it? it was individuals making decisions.
I don’t trust proton and I don’t know why anyone would
>they stopped more from occuring
this can’t be proven
let’s not say nukes are good. did the nukes undo those atrocities?
Democrats actually have power. The heritage foundation just hopes the Republicans listen to them.
>The Heritage Foundation has published new editions in its Mandate for Leadership series coinciding with each presidential election since 1981. Mandate for Leadership: A Conservative Promise is the ninth report in the series and was published in April 2023, earlier than any past releases. Heritage refers to the publication as a “policy bible”
they’ve been doing the same shit for 40 years. calling it project 2025 was just a way of staying in Vogue. many think tanks are making projects and naming them after future years.
The heritage foundation don’t scare me, at least not anymore than the Democrats.
it seems like your going to vote for someone. I say vote for who you think you should.
so I will make you a deal: I’ll vote my conscience, and you vote yours.
and in the meantime we organize, and after, we organize
>think asking what you personally risk from a Trump vs Biden presidency speaks to whether your insufferable self-righteousness is gambling with other people’s lives at no cost to you.
appealing to emotion doesn’t change the truth values of any of your claims, either.
there are web clients for mumble