oof ouch my bones
neurodivergent queer luddite technologist
oof ouch my bones
I’m with HE on this one. KF is absolutely against their ToS, and if the various middle providers between HE and KF aren’t going to step in, they’re within their rights to drop that traffic.
At this level the Internet is still somewhat decentralized. KF can continue to find other hosts and ISPs that condone their horror, and said providers and peers have the right to drop them for being terrible. They could register their own ASN, broadcast routes, and other providers could still refuse to peer with them. I think this is good, actually.
but what about The Slippery Slope? next conservatives will be making ISPs take down vulnerable minorities! shouldn’t legislation be handling this?
The conservative folks are already attacking LGBTQ+ and any other minorities they want via legislation. Why would you think this is a good argument?
gandalf the greybeard
whoa whoa whoa
how can we have a flamewar if youre going to be all reasonable like that
oh i never considered that reading of the quote
i read it as more: complaints about a language, particularly the amount of complaints, don’t mean it is a Bad Language that should be dropped in favor of something else
in fact the complaints validate that the language is being used by people, and that–the number of people actually using the language to Do Things–is imo a decent proxy metric for the usefulness of the language
so please complain about your languages’ shortcomings! i hate so many things about terraform / sh / python / golang / java and will gladly rant at length, and then go right back to using them
except groovy
fuck groovy
have you ever tried to recreate a simple shell pipeline in Python
youre right
thats what sed
is for
> There are only two kinds of languages: the ones people complain about and the ones nobody uses.
– Bjarne Stroustrup
jokes on them
im going back to lynx
Alt
+PrtScn
o
at least all those state actors will have to fight it out to control my system
and i have an excuse for poor application performance