@whalecoiner Vivaldi is the only other browser with the feature that keeps me on Firefox; proper history/bookmarks search right in the address bar. If it was open source I'd probably be using it already.
@whalecoiner Thanks for giving us a try, Charlie!
Today I learned that #bada55 is a color 😆
So confusion maxxed out.
German wikipedia says, Ursa Major consists of 7 stars in the end with Polaris and looks like that [image 1]
On the other hand: English wikipedia and Stellarium says this exact same form is the small bear aka Ursa Minor.
Any ideas?
> The #DigitalUniverse may be viewed for free via two software applications.
OpenSpace blablabla...
#Partiview is an #opensource viewer from the National Center for Supercomputing Applications.
https://www.amnh.org/research/hayden-planetarium/digital-universe/download
> #Celestia — real-time #3D visualization of #space
The free space #simulation that lets you explore our universe in three dimensions.
Celestia runs on Windows, #Linux, macOS, iOS and Android.
https://celestiaproject.space/
> #ViewSpace is a #free, web-based collection of digital interactives and videos highlighting the latest developments in #astronomy and Earth #science.
https://viewspace.org/
> #Stellarium
It shows a #realistic sky in #3D, just like what you see with the naked eye, binoculars or a #telescope. It is being used in planetarium projectors. Just set your coordinates and go.
https://www.techspot.com/downloads/5768-stellarium.html
Make the net weird again. Hand write sites like it’s the 90s. Pick interesting domain names and make fan sites or random knowledge known to everyone. Don’t monetize anything. Spearhead new protocols like Gemini. Make mods for games on your site. Make FAQs for obscure games no one knows about. Make public software services available to anyone. Make a news site about a really random subject. Create music in all kinds of different formats. Most of all, do it because you want to!
Mozilla's latest Firefox update includes a controversial "Privacy-Preserving Attribution" API, co-authored by Meta, to track users for ads. Critics argue it undermines privacy and lacks user consent. Learn how to disable this feature and safeguard your privacy.
https://blog.privacyguides.org/2024/07/14/mozilla-disappoints-us-yet-again-2/
@alshafei And Elon Musk just pledged to give $45 million a month to Trump #superPAC , so you know that means any and all #privacy laws will get vetoed by Trump if he wins.
Voting for Trump means #TechBros will make sure #SurveillanceCapitalism is here to stay
@fifilamoura Ah. Thank you for sharing. Makes more sense that she's a cult member.
“AI is not "democratizing creativity." It's doing the opposite”
https://www.bloodinthemachine.com/p/ai-is-not-democratizing-creativity
> The AI companies, of course, do not much care if they take a wrecking ball to the already fragile creative economy.
" *Long-lived access tokens* are valid for 10 years. These are useful for integrating with third-party APIs and webhook-style integrations. "
Is this a good idea from #security perspecitve? I do not think so, but what is a better way?
Probably we need a standardized #API endpoint e.g. "renew-token" (like auto discovery)
Just for kicks, I set up a VNC listener (not a full-blown honeypot) on port 5900. For a whole ight, it was hit only 3 times and these were just scans - not login attempts. Probably not worth the bother to make a real honeypot for it.
What about the rest? According to Greynoise, all of them except Oracle get practically no attacks - but maybe I'm using Graynoise's service incorrectly.
Maybe I should set up a simple listener for Oracle connections and see if it gets anything meaningful overnight...