I see no difference between most big tech companies and Reddit in terms of selling user data. Reddit is just being more forthcoming with it instead of allowing users to figure it out eventually.
They undeleted a bunch of content that they had no right to undelete, and are using EU citizens' data without consent. They're in violation of GDPR, and the EU is going to take a very dim view of that indeed.
The 10F Mastodon instance? Not for Lemmy users, as far as I know. Kbin users do have access to Mastodon content (it's in the "microblog" section over here), but I'm not sure how to get to the Mastodon instance of Ten Forward specifically. Looks like that instance is private, that's probably why.
Oh then that's not what I'm talking about. There are two separate ones right here that cross my feed. One is just 10 forward and then another one is something like 10 forward where everyone knows your name?
Huh, that's odd. Ok, this one is the one that spun off of Risa: https://lemmy.world/c/tenforward. I'm not sure I have seen the other one, can you link here?
Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn't work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !tenforward
Honestly I can't find it now, but then again im not sure which instance it was actually? I was searching on .world. Ill be blunt I still only kinda get how lemmy works lol i just scroll and shitpost. But it was definitely something to the effect of '10 forward where everyone knows your name'
Got ya. Like I said iono i have not really bothered to learn how lemmy works all that well i just kinda float around in a haze between all the instances i guess.
Yep. Plus how it's rendered depends on which frontend you're using. I'm using Alexandrite, and I swear, the way it shows the name of the community makes you think that the tagline or whatever it is is indeed part of the community name (it's not). So, yeah, it's not really your fault, as far as I see it.
Of course, however, learning how Lemmy works is pretty helpful in situations like this, but we all kinda learn it as we go.
That depends. Are you looking at preserving the music without loss of information? Then you need to use a lossless format like flac. Formats like aac, mp3, opus can throw away information you're less likely to hear to achieve better compression ratios. Flac can't, so it needs more storage space to preserve the exact waveform.
You can use a lossy format if you want. On most consumer level equipment, you probably won't notice a difference. However, if you start to notice artifacting in songs, you'll need to go back to the originals to re-rip and encode.
Is there a way to export my data from reddit and archive it on Lemmy instead? I dont want my valuable contributions of difficult-to-find information to be lost forever by just deleting it
Suggest the typical hardware device troubleshooting.
watch/tail your dmesg -w or kernel log as you add the extra drive.
It's curious that the system itself doesn't crash, but from your description it still sounds like a power starvation concern or possibly high temperatures if this device is under heavy load.
Yes. Very possible. An LLM could possibly be run locally or just sandboxed for only you. In my experience, I guess because there is less training data and fewer iterations, it tends to take longer and result in poorer outputs.
Microsoft could also let you control this but of course they do not want to.
.......
I switched to Openboard. After a few months, Its not as good yet as SwiftKey was, but it's also not sending all my text input to Microsoft.
The primary feature I miss from Swiftkey is the ability to insert a gif easily.
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