A_norny_mousse

joined 9 months ago
[–] A_norny_mousse@feddit.org 1 points 18 hours ago

I still fail to understand how a chocolatey butter cream could benefit from buttermilk, or if any such original recipe exists. But yeah, all the responses I got point to buttermilk being something you can't get everywhere, something that jibes with raw milk, something "trad".

[–] A_norny_mousse@feddit.org 1 points 18 hours ago* (last edited 16 hours ago)

Thanks for the explanation. Where I used to live buttermilk was a pretty normal product in each shop's dairy section, even flavored like yoghurt.

[–] A_norny_mousse@feddit.org 4 points 1 day ago (5 children)

"Don't drink and bake"

Nice. I still don't understand why buttermilk would be woke in the first place, or what OOP was going for.

[–] A_norny_mousse@feddit.org 1 points 1 day ago

Prolly the first time I have heard that somebody wants freemium.

[–] A_norny_mousse@feddit.org 12 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

People should be able to understand what is going on there, so I say go for it.

This would also open the door to other Slavic languages, many not even written in cyrillic.

[–] A_norny_mousse@feddit.org 4 points 3 days ago (2 children)

Isn't NextCloud supposed to be self-hosted?

In any case that's what I'd recommend: you can have server space for as little as €5/month.

If that's too much for you and you really need it to be completely free, then there's likely to be little Privacy. Try to avoid both US American companies and US American servers. The USA is not the only country to be avoided here though; to put it short, go EU.

[–] A_norny_mousse@feddit.org 2 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (2 children)

Looking at it from the outside, I believe it could be solved without all-out civil war. However, the USA are tied into lots of, erm, global stuff, and are starting to troll there the same way they do nationally, plus the whole thing of not being a reliable NATO partner anymore...

Either way, 2028 is still a long way away. Maybe things will start getting better if Dems can win back the Senate in 2026.

[–] A_norny_mousse@feddit.org 3 points 5 days ago

Actually watching street fights from years ago in a different city...

But what is remembered more? POTUS utterance or the debunk?

[–] A_norny_mousse@feddit.org 4 points 5 days ago

He also needs to stop embellishing his logorrhea with qualifiers like "or worse", "or better" etc.

stabbed in the ass or worse

It tickles the imagination in a way that probably wasn't intended and makes no sense.

[–] A_norny_mousse@feddit.org 3 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

"driven by politics"

Understatement of the year. Factually 100% correct but I don't think anybody bothered to even point that out in US politics for a long time.

[–] A_norny_mousse@feddit.org 7 points 5 days ago (1 children)

It's not only tech people who "hate" AI.


signed, half a tech person

1
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by A_norny_mousse@feddit.org to c/mycology@mander.xyz
 
 

A translation of this article with a few (minor additions). I could not find an English-language article. The original article has informative illustrations.


“Archive.Today” is a popular website for access to paid media content. Well-known domain names for the website are archive.is and archive.ph (and archive.md, archive.fo, archive.li, archive.vn).

What many users do not know: The website provides users' data to Russia.

The data goes to Mail.ru and thus to the Russian Internet company VK. A look at the website with Webbkoll shows the following Russian domain names:

  • privacy-cs.mail.ru
  • r.mradx.net
  • rs.mail.ru
  • top-fwz1.mail.ru

First and foremost, top-fwz1.mail.ru/js/code.js is integrated. Further code from Russia is then loaded.

The following applies to Russian Internet companies:

“Russia demands unconditional cooperation and extensive control options from its flourishing IT economy. It is not just about the full possession of the largest social network (VK) and the largest payment service (Mail.ru), but in the case of Yandex also to influence the entire output of Yandex News.

The data collected show which Paywall content is particularly popular in western media, but could also provide insight about their users. One can speculate about the importance of such data in the hybrid Russian war against Europe and the rest of the West.


(the following part is about the most common originating news sites in Switzerland that are to be archived. It refers to the above mentioned paywall content)

Incidentally (and in addition), anyone who pays for the paid media content must (also) expect for user data to go to Russia:

«Until recently, Ringier sent - thanks to these cookies - the IP addresses of "Blick" readers to the Russian tech company Yandex. […] Yandex is also listed at «20 Minuten». The free news portsal of the TX Group also works with the platform of the Interactive Advertising Bureau. […] The NZZ also sent data to the east. The traditional company on Falkenstrasse has integrated dozens of trackers, including from Yandex and also from Rutarget, an advertising company that belongs to the Russian Sberbank, is fully controlled by the state and is on the sanction list of the United States. »


The operators of «Archive.Today» do not open their identity. Neither an impressum nor a data protection declaration can be found on the website.

“Liberapay” in France should be able to say who operates “archive.today”. If you click on the "Donate" button at "Archive.Today", you will be forwarded to the donation platform "Liberapay".

A (more) reputable alternative is the Internet Archive at Archive.org, best known for the archiving of websites at web.archive.org.


Posted to privacy@lemmy.ml, privacy@lemmy.dbzer0.com and privacy@lemmy.world


edit 2 days later:

I'm aware this isn't the biggest smoking gun ever. But this particular service is in such widespread use that I feel it's important to shine a light on it.

Of course any post with certain keywords in the title will attract weird commentary, but I think you'll find that even the most contrary ones do not dispute the facts outlined in the article - just try to play them down, or ridicule them.

It's free, it has fast servers, it doesn't ask questions of you. It's a godsent!

 

A translation of this article with a few (minor additions). I could not find an English-language article. The original article has informative illustrations.


“Archive.Today” is a popular website for access to paid media content. Well-known domain names for the website are archive.is and archive.ph (and archive.md, archive.fo, archive.li, archive.vn).

What many users do not know: The website provides users' data to Russia.

The data goes to Mail.ru and thus to the Russian Internet company VK. A look at the website with Webbkoll shows the following Russian domain names:

  • privacy-cs.mail.ru
  • r.mradx.net
  • rs.mail.ru
  • top-fwz1.mail.ru

First and foremost, top-fwz1.mail.ru/js/code.js is integrated. Further code from Russia is then loaded.

The following applies to Russian Internet companies:

“Russia demands unconditional cooperation and extensive control options from its flourishing IT economy. It is not just about the full possession of the largest social network (VK) and the largest payment service (Mail.ru), but in the case of Yandex also to influence the entire output of Yandex News.

The data collected show which Paywall content is particularly popular in western media, but could also provide insight about their users. One can speculate about the importance of such data in the hybrid Russian war against Europe and the rest of the West.


(the following part is about the most common originating news sites in Switzerland that are to be archived. It refers to the above mentioned paywall content)

Incidentally (and in addition), anyone who pays for the paid media content must (also) expect for user data to go to Russia:

«Until recently, Ringier sent - thanks to these cookies - the IP addresses of "Blick" readers to the Russian tech company Yandex. […] Yandex is also listed at «20 Minuten». The free news portsal of the TX Group also works with the platform of the Interactive Advertising Bureau. […] The NZZ also sent data to the east. The traditional company on Falkenstrasse has integrated dozens of trackers, including from Yandex and also from Rutarget, an advertising company that belongs to the Russian Sberbank, is fully controlled by the state and is on the sanction list of the United States. »


The operators of «Archive.Today» do not open their identity. Neither an impressum nor a data protection declaration can be found on the website.

“Liberapay” in France should be able to say who operates “archive.today”. If you click on the "Donate" button at "Archive.Today", you will be forwarded to the donation platform "Liberapay".

A (more) reputable alternative is the Internet Archive at Archive.org, best known for the archiving of websites at web.archive.org.


Posted to privacy@lemmy.ml, privacy@lemmy.dbzer0.com and privacy@lemmy.world


edit 2 days later:

I'm aware this isn't the biggest smoking gun ever. But this particular service is in such widespread use that I feel it's important to shine a light on it.

Of course any post with certain keywords in the title will attract weird commentary, but I think you'll find that even the most contrary ones do not dispute the facts outlined in the article - just try to play them down, or ridicule them.

It's free, it has fast servers, it doesn't ask questions of you. It's a godsent!

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