

Literally 1984.


Literally 1984.


“Keep moving! We’ve taken a Viet Cong OP!”


I’m having fun getting my ass kicked on Hell Let Loose. Really enjoying walking for several minutes and then just dying without ever seeing the enemy.


It’s The Organization! Bring out the microwave, Okabe!


Thank you. Maybe that’s why I failed the first time. I must’ve went to the wrong city.


I’m going to visit the Cincinnati Zoo in 2016 and stop this one kid kid from falling into a gorilla enclosure.
Edit: fixed spelling error


I spend every breathing moment of my life arguing with people on the Internet on very trivial issues. Are you telling me you don’t do that?


the incident
Go on…


Remember how it would feel when a post in your favorite niche sub hit /all?
I’m from the anime community. It was not a good thing when it happened around a decade ago lol. It got so bad that the /r/anime mods voluntarily hid us from /r/all for a few years before eventually opening up again.
I also play niche gacha games with fan service, and the general consensus on having outsiders come in is negative. Mainly because the outsiders usually can’t tolerate fan service and the developers have to make the game tamer.
But I get what you mean, though. Echo chambers are bad for political-related communities. It’s exactly what lead to our current political climate.


Said more directly: r/popular sucks, and we’re moving away from it, and towards better, more relevant and personalized feeds.
I hate how the highlighted part is going to be a decent thing at best or a fucking horrible thing at worst.
OG artist doesn’t know you can say “porn” on the fediverse without being shadowbanned.
I think it’s for comedic purposes. You don’t get banned for saying “porn” on Twitter or Pixiv, the two platforms the artist posts on.


I’m not too familiar with VPNs that offer IPv6 addresses, so I can’t help with that. But I’m curious about why some people want IPv6 addresses. Are there any benefits to having an IPv6 address?


10+ years on Reddit. Never banned on any subreddit or Reddit itself, ever. First came here during the 2023 API controversy. Went back to Reddit since the anime community was pretty small here, and I could still use my own API key for 3rd party apps.
Came back to Lemmy a week or two ago due to this bullshit. I’m not affected yet as I still have my own API key, so I’ll be hopping back and forth between Reddit and Lemmy. But I know my time on Reddit is limited.
I just hope Lemmy and the rest of the Fediverse is polished up by the time of the next Reddit exodus. But based on the most recent API change, I think Reddit has learned to make smaller changes over long periods of time over one major change that angers everyone all at once.

Because the entire mod team resigned, it could either be:
I don’t think it was a protest from the other mods against the powertripping one as I don’t know how resigning is going to do anything useful. It’s more likely that this incident invited a lot of people to the subreddit and the mods just got tired of dealing with it. And because mods can’t close the subreddits like they did in 2023 anymore without Reddit’s permission, they all just resigned or the top mod just purged everyone.

I don’t think Reddit’s global rules prohibit sales. Otherwise, all the porn subreddits promoting OnlyFans would’ve been nuked. /r/art’s own rules prohibit sales, as seen here:

IMHO, this rule is a bit extreme but it isn’t without reason. Without this rule, the subreddit would be flooded with people trying to sell art. Selling art isn’t a problem, but if the entire subreddit is just people trying to sell their own artwork, then the community will just turn into FB Marketplace. And I would imagine the users wouldn’t like that.
The issue isn’t the rule. The issue is that the mods are powertripping assholes who just outright banned the dude and purged his entire post history on /r/art.


Sadly, they only removed access to new API keys. Existing ones still work, for now.
Why this is “sad” is because Reddit has learned from the past. They won’t immediately take drastic changes that will immediately piss off a big chunk of their users. Instead, they’ll do it slowly so fewer people will feel the immediate impact. But eventually, this will affect everyone.
And why this sucks for us is because if there’s no massive outrage like the one in 2023, there won’t be a mass migration to the Fediverse.
Unfortunately, Reddit has learned from their mistakes and restricted the ability for moderators to lock down their own subreddits. So any protest actions will not be as effective as 2023.
And just recently, Reddit announced that you can no longer generate your own API keys and will need to request permission from Reddit themselves. This is the final nail in the coffin for 3rd party apps, as back in 2023 you could still generate your own API keys and continue using 3rd party apps. The silence in the public outrage against this is deafening.
Instead of taking drastic actions affecting the most amount of people, Reddit is taking smaller actions that will slowly kill off things they don’t like. This will limit the outrage, and at the same time, they get to achieve what they want.


What benefit does this have over a Zigbee dongle on Amazon that’s cheaper? Would the advantage be that this is a 3-in-1 dongle?


Packed like sardines. The average day in Japan, and probably most of Asia lol.
We need an anime waifu Linux distro.