Password hashing is great, but if in attacker breaks lemmy or an instance server somehow and can modify lemmy or tinker with the front ending server config they can just steal credentials as they come in, so hashing is good, but IMO gets given more importantance than it should. I'll take my down votes now for downplaying password hashing.
big corporations
Big corporations and commercial software are so much different from open source projects that apples and oranges is a massive understatement, more like apples and asteroids.
Commercial projects have more constraints for a plethora of reasons. Open source, not so much. Some examples from a vendor perspective: Large customers and their environments limit (e.g. your biggest customer uses old crappy thing x that limits developers), license restrictions (e.g. using GPL code risks having to release the code and rights to distribute the software you are trying to sell), over promising marketing or sales that creates deadlines that limit quality control, incompetent co-workers, ability of your support staff and SLA requirements, etc. In house development has some of those issues, except they have to deal with crappy thing x that vendor won't or can't update, super important stuff using really old systems that are really hard to replace, like the software controlling a 10 million dollar 20 year old centrifuge used to separate a chemical critical to an industrial process.
Open source doesn't have these constraints, users can just fork the code and keep using the old stuff if their COBOL based financial transaction processing system needs it and update it themselves.
The millions of eyeballs on open source code is exaggerated. Most users of OSS, even those with the skills, don't look at the code of a lot of things they use. Their realistically isn't time. BUT...password storage, authentication, and session code is almost guaranteed to get scrutiny.
Last commercial software can do bad things like plain text passwords because they want to cut corners for the bottom line.
Open source software can still completely suck and make poor decisions as well because anyone can publish some OSS whether or not it is actually good.
What happens if you put a negative number in the other box? Does it refund your card for that amount?
If it worked, IANAL, but they did ask how much you wanted to tip and willingly gave you money...seems like a solid defense...any lawyers wanna chime in?
I'm not sure if it exists in the Fediverse. It mostly existed as a collection of blogs in the 2010s. A lot are still around. Some haven't posted in years or changed courses. Although it always existed to an extent, the OG is probably the groups talked about in Your Money or Your Life (A great book). Your Money or Your Life is originally from the early 1990s, although Vicky and Joe (the authors) promoted what they figured out before the book. The more notable blogs and forums are Early Retirement Extreme (has a book too) or Mr Money Mustache, with the latter maintaining an old school forum. I know of some other smaller blogs if you are interested. I don't feel like hunting down links, but you should have to problem finding them. I've been following the FIRE circle since around 2014. I linked to a FIRE blogger/podcaster (Mad Fientist) for the more in depth explanation of why you should absolutely max and not touch your HSA.
If I feel industrious, I could probably run a FIRE Fediverse community.
DS9 = WW2 in space, and I love it. If the federation operates anything like the US military, Sisko was given that assignment out of mercy and mistrust as a safe due to his recent trauma. It was probably intended for him to give him space to grieve, adjust to being a single parent, and move on or quietly retire. The federation had no idea the can of worms the wormhole was going to be.
So this grieving single dad, a hard ass job, gets thrown into what he probably thought was going to be a boring job, that turns out he had to balance being a diplomat, equivalent of a mayor, religious icon for a politically key group, and war time military commander in the biggest war in galactic history, and absolutely crushes it. Sisko is by far the best captain in the Star Trek universe.
I can never get affogato to taste right. What is the secret?
It's an accessibility thing. Time travelers are covered under the ADA. Once a symbol reaches ubiquity, it can never be changed! Back in my day about 100k years ago, before I touched a mysterious stone in Scotland and found myself in the 21st century, we put an old sandal in front of the cave entrance if we needed privacy! Now it is a sock on a doorknob! 100k years from know, people will still be marking entrances with footwear for privacy.
There are, haven't tried them because I haven't been super impressed by what I have gotten in local shops.
Like 170 to 180 degrees. IMO, optimal water temp is around 200 to 205.
This! There are only a handful of drip machines that brew at the right temperature and they are all expensive and not what you would find in a department store. Keurigs have the same issue.
When I upgraded my grinder to a $500+ one
I'm using a hand Kingrinder. They are sold on Amazon for ~80 or so USD. It only takes like 30! seconds to grind a shot. It has pretty good granularity with the settings and produces good enough consistency to make decent espresso.
I do love a well made vanilla latte. It's such a comfort drink. Take my purist card away.
No shame! I get a few pumpkin spice lattes from Starbucks every fall. I like them.
Eventually, I got a prosumer espresso machine.
I'm using a flair signature. It takes a bit of work, but I don't mind.
Age of Reason by Thomas Paine is another great one regarding religion.
Ditto with the non dark roasts. I wish I remembered the exact roast, but I was really pleasantly surprised by one of the light roast Starbucks beans I picked up because they were cheap.
Even if it is revenue, it is still a net loss. All it does is reduce taxable income, which is still makes the donation a net loss. For anyone not aware, the current federal US corporate income tax rate is 21%. So if a company gives 100 dollars to charity, they only save 21 dollars in taxes, so they are still down roughly 79 dollars, depending on the state taxes of where they are incorporated.
Rule 2. Get rid of and/or and just use or. https://www.grammarbook.com/blog/effective-writing/what-about-andor/. I don't feel like finding the section in Strunk's Elements of Style.
Rule 8 suggested text: All comments must be relevant to their parent post or comment. Sometimes a comment can raise a topic worth discussing that isn't related to the main post. It is easy enough to just collapse it if you aren't interested.
No Discord. I would go old school and put up an IRC server or use Matrix.
Rule 6. I would require troll questions to be tagged instead of serious questions. Having to specify that you want to use the community for its intended purposes goes against the spirit of the idea that people can ask anything without fear of judgement.
I would get rid of rule 7. Positive communities could sway these individuals away from that stuff. Any bad behavior is already covered by the no sea lioning and no harassment rules.