While I agree that first party systems suck, as someone with neither an iOS or Android device I personally prefer something work rather than a screen that says “connect iOS/Android”.
While I agree that first party systems suck, as someone with neither an iOS or Android device I personally prefer something work rather than a screen that says “connect iOS/Android”.
I use a hard G when pronouncing gif, and the inventor using a hard G is a good enough reason for me. But the argument that the G stands for graphics being the reason for it is a garbage argument. There are plenty of acronyms that are pronounced differently than the letters that make up those acronyms. For example the U in SCUBA is pronounced as a long U as in rule or June, but stands for underwater, which is pronounced as a short U.
Yes, you are correct in that a single individual’s action will make no difference, just like your single vote makes no difference either. However if everyone does their part it can make a massive difference.
While your individual contribution makes no difference, you still should try to do your part. Yes, change takes work and a bit of sacrifice. Just like how it takes time out of your day to do research on candidates and go to the polls.
If you don’t do the work, it doesn’t make you smart or clever, it just makes you an asshole taking advantage of others.
If I super heat a metal and it turns visibly red what is happening? Was it already emitting infrared and as it gets hotter the frequency shifts up? Or is it still emitting infrared but has a wider band of frequencies it is emitting as well (i.e. is it emitting frequencies below infrared as well as visible red)?
In my opinion getting on the federated messaging train is far more important than what initial homeserver you start on. Technologies like matrix, mastadon and lemmy suffer from network effects and I personally feel like the biggest hurdle is getting over that initial painful hump of getting yourself and the people you want to communicate with all using the technology.
Once you are using the platform regularly you’ll have a much better outlook on which homeservers have the users/rooms that you mostly communicate with and you can move there.
I used matrix.org as a home server for years until recently decided that I wanted to support the decentralization and stood up my own instance for me and my close friends to use.
I plan on doing the same with lemmy. I just discovered lemmy today. I have always thought reddit-style boards were prime candidates for federating, but didn’t know about this project’s existence. I initially had the same hesitation as you when it came time to choose a lemmy instance, but realized it doesn’t matter. I just ended up choosing lemmy.world for now until I get more acclimated with the space and then will either stay here, move to another server or self-host.
I hate that Google is exerting even more control on the internet with their TLD, but I don’t really think this attack is made all that much worse with .zip TLD. I can already bury a
.com
in a long URL and end it in .zip just fine like so:https://github.com∕foo∕bar∕baz@example.com/foo/bar/baz.zip
Or even use a subdomain to remove the @:
https://github.com∕foo∕bar∕baz.example.com/foo/bar/baz.zip
The truth is most people don’t look much at URLs outside of a domain to verify its authenticity, at which point the
.zip
TLD does not do much more harm than existing domains do.For mitigation, Firefox already doesn’t display the username portion of the URL on hover of a link and URL-encodes it if copy-pasted into the url bar. It also displays the punycode representation when hovering or navigating to the second example.