That's amusing, I would have thought they could write a few lines of code to target subs that went private or NSFW within the last month. Keep us posted if they appoint a new moderator, I am curious now.
Looks like people are recommending https://github.com/j0be/PowerDeleteSuite. Also, don't delete your account, you will need to continuously log in and re-delete posts that come back. Not sure if this is intentional on Reddit's part or just unreliable servers being restored from intermittent backups.
No worries. I added a section suggesting people understand regional specific safety stuff and listed this as one possible thing to be aware of. This kind of thing does happen in my area but its a bit more rare since its a relatively dry climate. The video you posted is truly nuts though. I have seen plenty of waterfalls in the back country that looked like that but just instinctively stayed away from them.
I see questions like this pop up on the NoStupidQuestions community on lemmy.world so it seems like a reasonable ask.
But tl;dr: If you are reading and posting on lemmy.world you are seeing and being seen by most people on lemmy in general. Any weird behavior is likely just normal open source growing pains.
Ideally Jeroba isn't tied to any specific instance. I have accounts on a couple different instances added to Jeroba and it switches between them nicely.
I am also confused about what @Colt420 is suggesting here. It is clear that you already have a sign up for lemmy.world. This should be enough to log into Jeroba so what you're seeing is likely just a bug.
FYI, the web page itself is a progressive web app. This means you can go to the web page in a mobile browser and click "add to home screen" and a shortcut shows up that behaves like an application. I think Jeroba will eventually be better than the PWA, but it's not there yet in my opinion.
Sometimes people twist one side of the rope to prevent this, it's hard to tell from the picture. Personally, I prefer a master knot though. "Mountaineering the freedom of the hills" and "climbing anchors" are good books that describe these techniques as well as pros and cons.
"Employees enter classified correspondences or use the bot to optimize proprietary code. Given that ChatGPT's standard configuration retains all conversations, this could inadvertently offer a trove of sensitive intelligence to threat actors if they obtain account credentials."
As I recall, the current advice from pretty much everyone is: Don't give ChatGPT or any other LLM sensitive information ever. Even without stolen credentials, these things like to regurgitate information they have seen before. E.g. Grandma reading you windows keys to fall asleep.
Many big tech companies have mentorship programs where you can connect with someone outside your team. I think it's worth looking at whether your company has such a thing. Sometimes the mentor can see and resolve issues from an outside perspective which may have been missed for the employee or manager.
I am intrigued by this but I wonder how it will work. Just the hosting cost of YouTube is orders off magnitude higher than Reddit/Twitter alternatives.
I'm totally new to being a mod anywhere so take my comment with a grain of salt. But it would be nice to have tools for communities with little or no NSFW content allowed. Perhaps something that just matches images and links to other posts and flags when they are NSFW elsewhere? I seem to recall there were some efficient algorithms and implementations for matching similar images, if it helps I can dig those up and link them.