Yes, I feel like the days of old reddit are numbered. We better be ready for the influx of new users when they close it.
Yes, I feel like the days of old reddit are numbered. We better be ready for the influx of new users when they close it.
Italy, Bulgaria, Spain for example. They usually couldn’t care less (unless it’s football/soccer piracy).
Germany, on the other hand, cares a lot. Use a VPN for sure there.
“VPN up” depends on the country. Some countries don’t give a flying fuck, don’t waste money on a VPN if you live in such countries.
PurelyMail is a great and cheap service. It’s like $10 per year. You just set up some records (MX and TXT) on your domain provider and that’s it.
You could also self-host email, but then you need a server that’s always powered on and it adds much complexity, so I suggest to use a managed service instead.
The good thing about using your own domain is that you’re not tied to any service. You could migrate to any other provider (such as ProtonMail, FastMail, etc.) without ever changing your email address on all services.
Exactly. Italy doesn’t care either, unless it’s football (soccer if you like freedom 🦅).
From the official Nintendo server, if you have an app that then removes the protection from the downloaded files.
In Italian, butterfly, bowtie and the kind of pasta are all called “farfalla”. Which has come first, though?
Sommerfugl (bird of summer) in Danish :)
But there’s no real alternative to YouTube.
And no, using a proxy service is like using YouTube itself with uBlock or whatever.
SponsorBlock also comes by default on SmartTubeNext for Android TV.
Pro-tip: apps can’t ask for leaving a review twice, so if you press yes and then go immediately back, it will never ask again.
And SmartTubeNext if you have an Android TV.
You just have to do it once in a few months, and recent versions made it way easier to just download the correct apk and patch it quickly.
Italy also has DNS filtering, but they recently added IP blocking for some sports streaming websites. This had terrible consequences
Secrecy and bypassing court orders? It seems like illegal censorship to me.
He removed the ability to see likes made by some profile on the profile page itself.
Yeah, I’ll be honest, never have I took a look at somebody’s likes on Twitter or Mastodon.
They can’t be completely private because instances have to share how many upvotes each post has. That’s a limitation of the fediverse, since everything is spread across many independent systems, data has to be exchanged across them.
As of now, they’re semi-private because end users can’t easily see who voted on a post/comment unless they manage an instance themselves.
Skibidi? Terrific.