I think teens do it to feel edgy.
I’m not saying that’s the ONLY reason they do it, but they hear about it and see others doing it and it’s a case of monkey see, monkey do.
I think teens do it to feel edgy.
I’m not saying that’s the ONLY reason they do it, but they hear about it and see others doing it and it’s a case of monkey see, monkey do.
Who is ‘him’? When I click the link it goes to Twitter and asks me to log in. I can’t tell who you are taking about.
Lol this is the best answer
Yep. It’s mind boggling that they still even do this.
The other thing I hate about reviews is when they use the same review page for different SKUs of the same product. So for example you’ll be reading a review of what you think is a 2 litre plastic container because that’s what you clicked on. The review will say something like ‘it’s too big for the fridge’. Meanwhile the review was actually for the 5 litre version of the same product. So then you have to scroll through a million reviews to find the relevant ones, with no way to filter them.
Yes
“Researchers, platforms, advertisers, government agencies, or other institutions interested in accessing the full list of domains or want details about our services for generative AI companies can contact us here”
I thought I was going crazy because I couldn’t find this list of websites. Fat lot of good this article is.
Well it’s a service I’m paying for, so yes a bit of trust is required. Their privacy policy looks decent as well. As it stands, I trust them more with it than I would my ISP, Google or Microsoft.
You can choose what region to log to (I chose Switzerland) and you can also configure the retention period.
My main issue with PiHole was that the container wouldn’t work on later versions of Ubuntu for some reason (if I remember correctly, anything later than 18.04). I never did figure it out. The other reason was since I was running it in Kubernetes, the whole point is to have multiple replicas running for redundancy, but PiHole’s UI is coupled with its backend DNS service so if you have 3 PiHole instances running, you had 3 GUI instances as well. You could load balance the DNS requests (I used MetalLB), but visiting the UI was pointless. Also, the config was very scripty and not really container friendly - I mean it worked but it wasn’t designed as a cloud native application. No fault of its own but it didn’t really suit the way I like to do things.
Enter Blocky, which doesn’t have a UI and has a very simple YAML config that is easily mounted to a container. It scaled much easier, used way less resources and was just simpler to manage. It was really exactly what I was looking for.
However, ultimately running the DNS service for my house out of a Pi cluster wasn’t really my best idea. It has to work 100% of the time, and I would have frequent outages. We are a family of 5, so imagine lots of ‘Dad! The TV’s not working!!’ and stuff like that every time. This thing was a pet project, and I didn’t have it set up as a ‘production’ service, which is what it really should be. Sometimes the metallb pods would fall over, or the kubernetes TLS certificates would expire for the cluster, etc. I didn’t have proper monitoring and alerting setup, etc. I just couldn’t be bothered putting the effort into it that it required.
NextDNS does exactly the same thing, with probably even better controls, is more reliable, has great logging and costs bugger all.
EDIT: meant to add, I used it for more than just adblocking, but also for parental controls. NextDNS is great for that as well.
I also started on pihole, but switched to Blocky because Blocky is way more DevOps friendly (I run this stuff on microk8s on a Pi cluster).
Then I just ditched it altogether and now use NextDNS. Well worth paying the small fee for. But you obviously don’t get the same DIY satisfaction out of it.
I’m still trying to figure it out. I joined feddit.uk just because I’m in the UK. Then I realised most of the communities were about politics and football teams. I read about Beehaw and like the sound of that so joined up there. Then realised that they had defederated from lemmy.world (which I understand and am not complaining about). So I created an account on lemmy.world as well.
I guess the thing to figure out is to find the communities you are interested in, subscribe to them and make sure your instance is federated with whatever instance those communities are part of. Then it doesn’t really matter which one you join? If you just want to scroll mindlessly through posts from all of Lemmy, I guess you can just find an instance that is federated with everything and set your filter to ‘All’ and go nuts.
Yeah kind of. A lot of duplicate material. But that’s to be expected I guess. The ratio of tech to non tech stuff is too high, and I hate memes but that’s just personal preference.
I just browse ‘all’ on my local instance every once in a while to see if any new interesting communities have appeared, and then I’ll subscribe to them and go back to just browsing ‘subscribed’.
I figure eventually I’ll discover the best communities that I’m interested in but I’m not expecting it to happen overnight.