angelmountain

joined 11 months ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] angelmountain 30 points 18 hours ago

Linux. For desktops I like it as well, but I can understand some arguments against it. However, for all other cases there is hardly any match. The internet basically runs on it.

[–] angelmountain 5 points 1 week ago

2-stroke mopeds

[–] angelmountain 2 points 1 week ago

Look into Aylla for good quality leather shoes (buy once, cry once) and I also enjoy my Freet shoes for when I want/need sporty shoes.

For the Aylla shoes I would recommend investing in some shoe trees, because the leather will wrinkle without those because the shoes are so flexible.

And for non-european: Jim Green barefoot. Bit less flexible than the Aylla's, but amazing quality at a very reasonable price. I don't think you can find more durable barefoot style shoes.

[–] angelmountain 4 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Related to gambling: being "pot committed"

[–] angelmountain 114 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (5 children)

I assume Facebook runs on Linux, as does the rest of the internet?

I wish Linux distros use a license that prevents this nonsense.

(I know including ethics in a license is a bad idea, but still...)

[–] angelmountain 8 points 3 months ago (2 children)

Harlem in New York or Harlem west of Amsterdam?

[–] angelmountain 1 points 3 months ago

I don't think capitalism/communism is a binary thing. I think (hope at least) there are more options.

I also think that the problem with smartphones is that they are designed to get you "hooked". The companies doing that are hoping to influence your behaviour so you will buy more of your stuff. And because we live in a society where capitalism is seen as holy and just, we let them.

I think we don't really have a free choice anymore. Companies know how to always win, they are too good at influencing through advertisement and design choices. And without actual free choice capitalism does not work. Anyone telling you that we have a free choice to not buy a product or to not use a smartphone, lies. A choice is not free if companies can and do spend millions of dollars to influence my choice.

Also, capitalism requires a free market to function. But a true free market will always end in a monopoly, because the biggest company can always buy the other smaller companies, again breaking the free market. So there is a catch-22 problem in the system.

TL;DR - Capitalism is slavery, except if you are the CEO.

[–] angelmountain 1 points 3 months ago

Chances are I live in a different country, sp probably not able to help you, sorry! I tried buying an anonymous sim card in Spain, but I don't think that's actually possible there for instance.

[–] angelmountain 1 points 3 months ago

For me it's more of an experiment, to avoid advertisement and just to be sure when some person takes power that does care about stupid things like my political views, sexuality, etc. That has happened before. And the technology is there to scrape this data in mass quantities, so someone is going to do it at some point.

[–] angelmountain 19 points 3 months ago

Keep your murder-machine out of my city. Please.

[–] angelmountain 13 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Just wanted to send some love your way. 2025 will be your year ❤️

 

So my company is investigating whether it's worth it to use ThreatDown (the corporate version of Malwarebytes) for endpoint-protection.

However, recently (October 9th) a critical vulnerability in Firefox was reported by Mozilla: CVE-2024-9680.

The "strange" thing is that there was no mention of this vulnerability in ThreatDown when I checked after the weekend (October 14th):

(screenshot shows issues that ThreatDown did find, sorted from worst to least bad.

Even though the version of Firefox did contain the vulnerability:

And Locize did run several scans on this endpoint in the mean time:

We contacted ThreatDown about this and the next day the vulnerability suddenly shows up in ThreatDown:

To me it feels like we had to notify ThreatDown about the vulnerability, instead of them notifying us, which is the exact opposite of what we are paying them for, right?

Is this a strange conclusion? What is your experience with them? Any other comments/ideas/things we are missing?

 

I just got a PS3 because I never had enough money for it when I was younger and it is quite affordable nowadays. I started playing a first few games, but I noticed I really like multiplayer games the most.

However, I only found a few people in a Battlefield 4 server yesterday. What other games would you suggest me getting that I can still play online?

Is there any football game that's still alive for instance?

 
 
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