Has someone asked what there IS to defend if not people’s lives?
Geek. Bourgondiër. Belgistani. Add label here.
Has someone asked what there IS to defend if not people’s lives?
The finance ministry of the world?
…ask Turing? Who suggested that? The Turing test is not “let’s ask Alan” 😋
Then it is long obsolete, because to a common observer, something like chatgpt could easily pass that test if it wasn’t instructed to clarify it is a machine at every turn.
This particular photo is shopped, but i think false-perspective Illusions might actually be a good path…
The Turing test is about whether it passes as human, not whether it is human.
Shouldn’t have not pooped for three days.
That’s a matter of preference - off pizza i prefer green ones!
Also, for this, strangely enough it works better with the sliced ones than the whole ones. They’re a bit saltier. Like me 😋
Try pepperoni and black olives, that’s also pretty good.
Suçuk/mushroom is wonderful!
As if any spyware worth it’s salt didn’t install itself as service with an innocuous name. Something like “Facebook” or “TikTok”.
Agreed. Shame about the kid, though, apparently he didn’t even want to be there but was forced.
I think it also helps that it wasn’t intentional. Nobody likes the obvious corp whoring for a quick cash grab.
There is something called low-residue diet, often needed before or after certain medical procedures. You might Google information on that.
Wish they would.
Incidentally, wtf is bluesky? I literally have never heard of it, apparently a Twitterlike?
Your domain is “hosted” (in this context, the DNS entries, not the actual content) on one or, ideally, more DNS servers that are known as the authoritative servers for your domain. You can look those up by searching the SOA (start of authority) and NS (nameserver) records for it.
Downstream servers may keep those and other records in cache for a while, usually guided by the TTL (time to live) entry. Once that expires, however, they need to refresh the data from the authoritative servers.
When those are unreachable, that cannot do so, and your domain is de facto unreachable for the internet at large, regardless of your own server actually being up.
You can still reach them by surfing to the actual IP instead, and/or hardcoding the DNS name in your local hosts file or your local DNS server/resolver. That is, of course, not visible to the internet at large.
You could host your own DNS servers to mitigate somewhat, but keep in mind that every level above your domain also needs to know which server is authoritative - my tuxera.be used to be self hosted, so the .be root servers had to know what the SOA for tuxera was.
Honestly, it’s not something to worry about. I didn’t keep up with changes in DNS security, so i switched to route53 (Amazon). I’ve been considering switching again to hetzner.de where i have some servers anyway.
DNS is pretty lightweight (relatively speaking), so it’s probably the last thing to go down if a registrar is in trouble; you’d have plenty of warning signs beforehand.
(Yes, for pedantry, technically a registrar doesn’t even have to offer DNS at all, they just handle ownership and administration at the top level domain, but most do anyway)
Quite the opposite. Use drives from as many different manufacturers as you can, especially when buying them at the same time. You want to avoid similar lifecycles and similar potential fabrication defects as much as possible, because those things increase the likelihood that they will fall close to each other - particularly with the stress of rebuilding the first one that failed.