blazix

@blazix@kbin.social
0 Post – 9 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

Yes!! And the active non-toxic community.

There are UI improvements to be made and general coordination and understanding of the fediverse (eg. discovering communities, duplicate communities, etc), but we will get there.

10 more...

Every year I think that the shenanigans R's pull will make them suffer in the next election. Still, with gerrymandering, voter suppression, and the "if they go low, we stay high" attitude we have, the election ends up becoming a coin toss.

If you're rich enough or travel enough (like politicians), you can just claim that you will "be out of the county on election day and during the period for early voting by personal appearance".

https://www.sos.texas.gov/elections/voter/reqabbm.shtml

These laws are meant to impact the poor and the middle class.

Phones are great for emergency notifications but I think AM would be better for long-term sustained emergencies. It's a highly highly unlikely event though.

Not the end of the world but it would have been nice to have it. AM travels much farther than FM which would be helpful in catastrophic events.

But the chances of something like that happening are very low. If you're that paranoid, you can get a ham radio.

Yeah, 6% is bad but for the shit show, I expected more.

The only way to get people to move is to move yourself. If we start more engaging discussions on the fediverse and make software/engineering improvements to projects (kbin, lemmy, mastodon, native apps), we will get there.

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I can also see there being blocklists similar to uBlock Origin or other browser extensions. Except, it will be done at the instance level by admins.

Perils of living in Massachusetts. I hope similar laws pass federally in the United States.

That being said, I've been on the other side of GDPR. Getting ready for GDPR around 2017 was so much work. We initially had a lengthy confluence runbook with all the places data had to be deleted from. It took a while to automate. Painful, but it's the right thing to do.

RE: OP

I'm pretty sure this is in violation of both GDPR/CCPA

IANAL, but I agree. In my past companies, when a GDPR deletion request comes, we follow through and delete the data. We might ask users to verify their identity but that's about it. It should be 2-3 emails back and forth.

If enough folks do it, Reddit will most likely flag any comment edits or deletes that happen > 2 months (arbitrary) after the comment creation date.

Reddit already has the data and they will figure out a way to recover 90%+ of it.