Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
kianga@tail.ooo ("Kianga") wrote:
If you think cat bellies are deliciously soft but risky, wait until you’ve tried dragon belly!
🐉 @karb, 🦊 @Polarie_Fox, 📷 @Deepseacreatur3
Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
kianga@tail.ooo ("Kianga") wrote:
If you think cat bellies are deliciously soft but risky, wait until you’ve tried dragon belly!
🐉 @karb, 🦊 @Polarie_Fox, 📷 @Deepseacreatur3
Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
eff ("Electronic Frontier Foundation") wrote:
After almost twenty years on the platform, EFF is logging off of X.
This isn’t a decision we made lightly, but it might be overdue. 🧵 (1/5)
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2026/04/eff-leaving-x
Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
thomasfuchs@hachyderm.io ("Human Brain Enthusiast") wrote:
Companies should be required by law to completely open devices when they end support for them
If they don’t, the penalty should be that the CEO has to eat the bricked devices
Boosted by GuillaumeL@hachyderm.io ("BigSaur G"):
arretsurimages@mamot.fr ("Arrêt sur images") wrote:
Paris Match met à l'honneur la romance de Jordan Bardella avec la princesse Maria Carolina de Bourbon des Deux-Siciles. Derrière cette Une, il y a le marchepied de Bernard Arnault à l’extrême droite. L'édito de Pauline Bock en accès libre 👇
dysfun@treehouse.systems ("gaytabase") wrote:
just tried incredibly cheap reconstituted corn snacks ('gwoon kaasflips'). oddly delicious, with the appearance of wotsits and the flavour of quavers.
that's... not gonna make a whole lot of sense outside the uk, is it?
pzmyers@freethought.online ("pzmyers 🕷") wrote:
Today is going to suck.
https://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/2026/04/10/ive-got-homework-for-you/
db@social.lol ("David Bushell 🪿") wrote:
"Our investigation confirmed the domain was incorrectly flagged as malicious, stemming from a report by one of our trusted partners, the domain does not pose a threat and it has been, therefore, removed from our global threat database."
"trusted partners", eh?
Some new t-shirt and pin designs are available in our store, and you can also get free downloadable posters to help to spread Mastodon!
https://blog.joinmastodon.org/2026/04/new-t-shirts-pins-and-posters/
Boosted by baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason"):
GossiTheDog@cyberplace.social ("Kevin Beaumont") wrote:
lol of the day - noticed I’m quoted in this article, but I never spoke to the publication and the quotes are made up. They use GenAI during article creation and just made up what I thought 🤣 https://www.techbuzz.ai/articles/hacker-siphons-700k-from-u-k-energy-firm-in-payment-redirect
Boosted by baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason"):
SmudgeTheInsultCat@mas.to ("Smudge The Insult Cat 🐀") wrote:
ChrisWere@toot.wales ("Chris Were ⁂🐧🌱☕") wrote:
Me and Drew and streaming some Div over on https://live.freebooters.uk/ or @fblive
Boosted by dysfun@treehouse.systems ("gaytabase"):
amypotato@mastodon.ie ("Amy") wrote:
@dysfun I've used the term reports before? Mainly in the context of bug bounty, but could work elsewhere.
dysfun@treehouse.systems ("gaytabase") wrote:
Did anyone come up with a better name than 'issues' or 'tickets' yet for those things that aren't always problematic and aren't always going to be worked on?
dysfun@treehouse.systems ("gaytabase") wrote:
i am sure getting tired of seeing shocked face on youtube video cards
dysfun@treehouse.systems ("gaytabase") wrote:
the obscure OpenBSD operating system
hmm, is that fair?
yeah, it probably is.
Boosted by Mastodon:
MastodonEngineering ("Mastodon Engineering") wrote:
Trunk & Tidbits for March is out - our monthly engineering news, featuring current releases, the profiles redesign, Collections, additional FEPs implemented - lots of work in motion.
#MastoDev #MastoAdmin #Mastodon
https://blog.joinmastodon.org/2026/04/trunk-tidbits-march-2026/
dysfun@treehouse.systems ("gaytabase") wrote:
bro, you're a toaster
dysfun@treehouse.systems ("gaytabase") wrote:
how bad are the individual ads themselves? well they say 'taboola' on them, so...
dysfun@treehouse.systems ("gaytabase") wrote:
i do browse the bbc on my desktop but obvs this is somewhat better set up for not showing me all those ads so i hadn't quite noticed just how obnoxious it had gotten.
dysfun@treehouse.systems ("gaytabase") wrote:
if you ever wonder whether the bbc is reputable, you should go look at the website they serve people outside of the uk.
i do not normally use my phone to browse the bbc, but i clicked a link on it just now and holy shit i cannot believe how often they insert ads. literally in some cases after 1 sentence of text, so you can get literally a sentence surrounded by half page ads.
baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason") wrote:
And the rest, the shit systems that aren't core infrastructure, are packed with KNOWN vulnerabilities.
Much of the web is an all you can eat software exploit buffet. People should be much more worried about malicious people finding ways to automate the application of known exploits than about systems finding hard-to-exploit vulnerabilities in otherwise hardened software.
(Also don't use Windows for anything that needs to be safe. Just my 2 kroner.)
baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason") wrote:
The whole "my magic genie can break open any software in the world" thing is so suspect
And now it has media types imagining it can not only find vulnerabilities, but vibe code a workable exploit, cut through multiple layers of security and then hop onto an air gapped system to take down modern society.
I know most software is shit, but the infrastructure systems modern society relies on are, for the most part, designed with the assumption that they have undiscovered vulnerabilities
db@social.lol ("David Bushell 🪿") wrote:
CodePen to illustrate cascade layer madness!
https://codepen.io/editor/dbushell/pen/019d76b2-dcc6-7244-a269-d8308838179e
they shouldn't let me build websites
db@social.lol ("David Bushell 🪿") wrote:
this can result in bizarre behaviour were some properties in a block apply, others don't
you know what, just don't use !important
db@social.lol ("David Bushell 🪿") wrote:
just noticed a typo in one of my URLs and i'm devastated
Boosted by jwz:
AdrianRiskin@kolektiva.social ("Adrian Riskin :anarchoheart2:") wrote:
One thing to remember on confederate surrender day is that after the war many thousands of elite rebel officers and government officials had their citizenship restored and their lands left unconfiscated. They worked their way back into public life -- white zillionaire class solidarity is a powerful thing --- and then, once the 1877 Hayes-Tilden compromise shut down any hope of radically reconstructing the South, these newly redeemed rebels fully reclaimed their ruling class status.
They served as state governors, federal representatives and senators, state legislators, judges from local magistrates all the way up to the US supreme court and everything in between, university presidents, cabinet members, and on and on and on. Former Confederate States Army captain Cameron Thom even served as mayor of Los Angeles.[1]
These men, perpetrators and beneficiaries of American chattel slavery, the most horrific crime in US if not world history, not only escaped all consequences but spent decades in powerful positions. They were able to shape American government, law, and culture to their own ends, ends which they now fully shared with the capitalist elite they'd been at war with just a few years earlier.
We still suffer from the effects of this. The racist laws, the violent cops that enforce them, the prisons, the 13th amendment slavery, etc., the former Confederate elite had a hand in making all of it. The fact that modern US police evolved from slave patrols isn't just a rhetorical flourish. Both were created to solve the same problems, in many cases created by the same people.
So yeah, it's fun to talk and joke about April 9 and stuff, but Appomatox wasn't the end of capitalism, only the end of a squabble between capitalists over the most sustainable way to exploit their victims. By 1877 the elites had settled their differences and buried their hatchets and were working in harmony once again. And the rest of us are still paying for it.
[1] See the book Patriots Twice: Former Confederates and the Building of America after the Civil War by Stephen M. Hood. This book is a self-published piece of revisionist lost cause bullshit, but it has useful and independently checkable lists of what former confederate elites got up to postbellum.
#ConfederateSurrender #CivilWar #Reconstruction #Slavery #HayesTilden #LosAngeles #Capitalism
Boosted by jwz:
eschaton ("Chris Hanson") wrote:
“The Hill” asks “Why are so many Americans starting to sympathize with villains?” What they don’t understand is that we’re finally starting to see Americans *not* sympathize with villains, when those villains are economically exploitative!
Why are so many Americans supporting Luigi Mangione? Because the man he’s accused of killing was CEO of a company that murders 60,000 or more people **per year** in the name of increased profit.
Claim denial that leads to death is murder. Period.
Boosted by glyph ("Glyph"):
mhoye@cosocial.ca wrote:
It's difficult for me to talk calmly about companies that are excited to spend hundreds of millions of dollars training stochastic models while the teachers in every public classroom in North America pay for their own chalk, some of their students' school supplies and some fraction of their students' lunches out of their own pockets. That those companies go on to say this will make the teachers "obsolete" is too much.
db@social.lol ("David Bushell 🪿") wrote:
not just a ticket with my info, full on account
db@social.lol ("David Bushell 🪿") wrote:
so i emailed joindns4.eu about a bad DNS response for one of my domains (i don't even use them myself)
they automatically created an account with my personal data on a 3rd party CRM
not every EU of them 🤨