Presumably what the other commenter was referring to is the US having the oldest codified constitution
Presumably what the other commenter was referring to is the US having the oldest codified constitution
Oh sure, there’s definitely lots of valid criticism of rainbow capitalism, but to be clear, it’s not pride month itself that’s the issue there - it’s corporations leveraging it for profit
But the serious answer is because LGBTQ people have been systemically discriminated against in pretty much every country
Literally the next thing in my All feed is about the previous US president having a chill time with a man who proposed stoning gay people to death
You had me for a moment there
Which bit did I make up?
Ah yes, because there definitely wasn’t some other common characteristic to the (not only leftist, as you carefully avoided mentioning) parties that were banned
Something like, I don’t know, supporting the country actively invading Ukraine, perhaps?
Source?
Edit: so I figured I go investigate for myself and by “Ukraine” you mean random citizens involved in what was basically a civil war, the people in the building were using it as a fortress, and blockaded themselves inside, and by “people” you meant Russian separatist insurrectionists, who were firing from the building and throwing Molotov cocktails into the crowd below.
That’ll be “marxist-leninist”
The fuck did Ukraine do?
Why not just use type c headphones?
The 3.5mm thing has always baffled me, it feels like complaining your pc doesn’t have a VGA port, except the thing you connect costs like a fiver
As people have said, it’s actually perfectly legal in the US, horrifyingly.
But the UK has very strict data protection laws which we inherited from when we were in the EU, and medical data is explicitly considered sensitive. If they actually did sell medical information, they’re in deep shit, legally.
How is turning it off an improvement over lockdown? I was under the impression that the security impact is basically the same
I broadly agree, but that’s not what this is, right?
This is a demonstration of using AI to execute combat against an explicitly selected target.
So it still needs the human to pull the trigger, just the trigger does some sick plane stunts rather than just firing a bullet in a straight line.
Does it behave the same if you refer to it as “the war in Gaza”/“Israel-Palestine conflict” or similar?
I wouldn’t be surprised if it trips up on making the inference from Oct 7th to the (implicit) war.
Edit: I tested it out, and it’s not that - formatting the question the same for Russia-Ukraine and Israel-Palestine respectively does still yield those results. Horrifying.
Ooh I didn’t know about the systemd integration, that actually sounds like a really smart approach.
To be honest, until right now I’d pretty much written off podman as docker 2
Ok 👍