For those who don’t play the Witcher 3, what does this mean?
For those who don’t play the Witcher 3, what does this mean?
Wow, that’s great. Hopefully the servers can stand the load!
Has anybody used KolabNow for email? It’s the hosted version of Kolab which is opensource
They have an OK price, I think of 5 CHF/month (swiss francs).
They also have email import, which combined with Proton Mail’s export tool, allows a manual, but traditional migration. (More features). I also like that they support SMTP and IMAP, but I don’t know how that works with E2E encryption 🤔
@Tutanota@mastodon.social hasn’t responded yet to whether it’s possible to migrate emails from proton to tutanota. Proton Mail has an export tool, but I couldn’t find an equivalent import nor export tool for tutanota :/
Thanks for the tip! Forgot that was possible. Done.
So… did they respond or not? It’s past the 4th…
Edit: it’ll probably go to court.
It’s a systemd service running the java app. But I figured it out. See the edit.
You make a good point about legal moderation. Modlists could work on top of that.
“serverless” communities have been suggested multiple times and hopefully they will be implemented someday. It is a good idea.
Hmmm, fedidb says “total users: +93K since last month”, “total monthly active users: +68K since last month”. That’s not that much, but not too shabby either.
Looks like the growth is more attributed to pixelfed
Hopefully in 10 years, the moderation tools will be good enough to deal with a scaling userbase. What the fediverse needs is moderation subscriptions i.e subscribing to or unsubscribing from moderation actions of different groups or people.
For example, joining a community would subscribe you automatically to the moderation list of that community, but you could also unsub from the list if you don’t like the mods there and sub to a group of people you trust more with mod decisions. Imagine if there’s an overeager mod in the community you subbed to and you wanted to exclude the modding decisions - mod lists would allow that.
Now you’re a nerd too 😀 Welcome!
Some people are still stuck in the past. What can you do? 🤷 But if you’re a registered student or faculty, you can send emails with the university’s email, can’t you?
Not only did he post that, his opinion was then posted with the official account on reddit. Supposedly a miscommuniction between him and the media team 🤷
That website is terrible on mobile. Goddamn. They also immediately go into the history of why they exist. Nobody new will care. I just want to see what’s happening, where, and how (online, offline). The why should be I’m the “about us” section or something, not the front-page.
I’m not sure if you’re intentionally missing the point or not. We’re not talking about encrypted group chats. We’re talking about encrypted Facebook. The amount and type of data involved is very different, so is how long the data will be retained.
But sure, if you want to ignore unsharing things, go ahead. Let’s see how that’ll work out for you 🤷
Such a popcorn moment, honestly. I wonder where they’ll go to once Red Note blocks US Americans. They might be able to go back to tick tock if the US backpedals, but if not… is pixelfed or whatever fediverse alternative exists really ready to absorb 700M accounts?
People listen to radio? I honestly didn’t think there were still radio channels…
This does make sense, and I do not understand a lot of the technical details, or how this problem would be solved. I just wish it was haha
:D same. I think the solutions could be applied elsewhere too. They’d be very interesting.
Can’t say I understand what happens technically when someone is kicked from a matrix room, so what what happen with the encryption keys I dunno.
That depends on the client. Some clients will exit, some will stay in the room. Encrypted matrix rooms use “perfect forward secrecy”, meaning new people can’t read the past, and old people removed from the group/chain/chat cannot read new messages. So, being kicked from a room would still allow you to see all the chat history you stored. Or if you sign in with a device that didn’t get the “kick” message yet, the server could still send you all the messages up until the point of the kick message.
I’m not sure how Matrix implements it and server + client implementations can differ.
Sharing != downloading forever. When you browse it, yes, technically it’s in your cache, but that’s why it’s called a cache. Most people won’t install a client that puts their browsing into long-term storage (unless Microsoft takes a screenshot for them and promises never to upload it somewhere). Regardless, it is still a security issue (as I just described with releasing the encryption key). You can choose to ignore it, until someone comes along and exploits it. Then you have a bunch of angry people screaming at you because you “didn’t close an obvious security hole”.
This isn’t even humor, this is the truth!
Anti Commercial-AI license