Canta uses Shizuku to delete user and systen apps. There is also a few categories like Recommended, Advanced, Unsafe, etc. Most of the apps also have comments on it by the dev (I suppose).
forgejo: https://forgejo.asudox.dev/Asudox
matrix: https://matrix.to/#/@asudox:matrix.org
aspe:keyoxide.org:D63IYCGSU4XXB5JSCBBHXXFEHQ
Canta uses Shizuku to delete user and systen apps. There is also a few categories like Recommended, Advanced, Unsafe, etc. Most of the apps also have comments on it by the dev (I suppose).
Because URLs are usually in ASCII. That was a standard. Check RFC 1738 and 3986. Now, you can use percent encoding, but why use that. It just complicates things.
You won’t get non latin usernames anytime soon. But you can change the display name using non latin charactets
You can delete or disable the service that creates those stories. Download Shizuku and activate it, then use Canta to delete it.
Oh great. Now I’m losing hope in this project even more.
No, not at all. They both are made for different purposes.
privatebin is pretty good.
Welp, I haven’t seen anyone learn Swift other than for Apple stuff these days. So I wonder how many can actually contribute to the code. It’s also made by Apple, so yeah. It would have been more performant and secure (both of which are pretty important in a browser) if it was written in a more low level language. For example Rust.
They only realized that when he said that? What a weird infosec team. I guess they also could use SimpleX if they wanted the most secure, private and anonymous option, but I think Signal is pretty well balanced as a messenger. Good privacy and usability.
It’s nice and all but usage of Swift is kind of not great.
XMPP could have been great if it weren’t left to die. The clients look like from the 2000s and encryption is a mess to set up. We instead have Matrix, which is pretty resource intensive to run and has its own problems but it practically functions like XMPP.
Surprised that happened. Very rare to see that these days.
If that were to happen, the receiving end wouldn’t know who sent which vote, thus making spamming extremely easy.
Not sure if that is effective at all. Why would a crawler check the robots.txt if it’s programmed to ignore it anyways?
Block? Nope, robots.txt does not block the bots. It’s just a text file that says: “Hey robot X, please do not crawl my website. Thanks :>”
There’s a reason why software is being made with Rust now. It has the speed of C++ (sometimes faster), has a nice syntax, is memory safe by default, has the best compiler error messages and also the book is very good. I learnt entirely by the book and it’s very good at explaining things.
I do wonder: why not rust? It would have been amazing. A fast language on par with C++ that also is memory safe. But Swift? You gotta be kidding me…
I’ll just wait a few days or even weeks before doing any big updates, read the news page of archlinux.org and maybe some forum stuff. Nothing broke so far on my personal laptop, but I also don’t tinker alot. All of the data of the containers are also stored in a storagebox from Hetzner so the system breaking wouldn’t even mean that much, I’ll just restore from a snapshot and everything will be fine.
I also might think of switching to NixOS instead. They say it’s hard but pays off well and can be very stable.
Using ASCII in URLs is simple and is less error prone than “supporting” unicode via percent encoding. It is also just a convention to use ASCII for usernames in many platforms. ASCII is also supported out of the box in major OSes while some unicode characters might not. What about impersonation? And what about people trying to type in the username of someone that uses unicode? It is not logical to use unicode in this case.