Cameras in the house? That is still creepy.
kbal
Yeah, it's clear why they're unhappy about it. What's the point of pretending to take action if you can't then lie about what a great job you did?
I'm sure It will probably be fine for at least a year or two before the new owners manage to ruin it somehow but anyway I'll just go make sure I have a full backup of my 150 gigabytes of skyrim mods.
Maybe he still owns the quarry down the road.
How on earth did CDPR fall on such hard times that they had to bring in Epic Games to make an engine for them?
I wouldn't be willing to disable my vpn for the nyt so thanks for confirming that it wouldn't have made a difference. It appears that they now block everyone who doesn't let javascript freely do whatever it wants to fingerprint you or whatever. I'll not miss them too much.
autokey — a recent "autohotkey" sort of thing for linux. It comes to mind since I recently had to find a replacement for the one I'd used previously which died of bitrot. Mostly I just use it for app-specific key remapping for Firefox so that I can disable its ^W which I only ever hit accidentally when it was possible.
Mastodon is very bad at fetching replies, if you have a small instance I think you need to add some other software to do that: https://blog.thms.uk/fedifetcher
It was just bothering me this morning (not the time of day but I want ISO date format.) It's probably this bug: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1935895
Your "empirical" sample size of one may be too small to get an accurate reading on the views of contemporary Christianity.
The point of the 1.5° goal was to give policy makers an idea of how much time they'd have to get serious about reducing greenhouse gas emissions at a pace that would be acceptable to politicians and economists. According to the plans they came up with back in 2015 we'll need world emissions to start going down by 2020, so there's not much time left.
I don't know about the Canada Post changes but "the government reading your mail doesn't matter because snail mail is obsolete anyway" doesn't seem like a good attitude to bring to it.
I don't know about the refugee law changes but "government needs the authority to act on the fly unconstrained by the rule of law in case there's a crisis" doesn't seem like a reasonable kind of thing to say about it.
You seem to have no comment on the part about foreign states being "empowered to compel the production" of data or the other changes relating to "subscriber information and transmission data" which seem quite dangerous and are the things I've most often seen other people worried about.
And then of course you don't mention at all the "lawful access" part, both horrific and easy to understand, wherein electronic service providers can be obligated to assist CSIS and the cops in spying on their users in every way possible, and forbidden from telling anyone when they've been ordered to do so.