

Yes, the a variants are typically cut down.
Yes, the a variants are typically cut down.
Hannibal Lecter was straightjacketed, strapped to a hand truck, and muzzled.
That’s doublethink. Cognitive dissonance is the discomfort you feel from it. Obviously, he feels none.
Yo mama’s so fat, her mass affects the spin of galaxies! Or her mass is affecting our perception of those galaxies. We’re not sure yet.
It’s “voluntary” in the sense that either you allow it or you don’t get into the country.
What technology, slave labor? We already have that.
A user’s posts and comments are actually stored on their home instance, I believe, and a copy is pushed to your instance during federation.
I hope she can get to safety.
EUdora, since I don’t think the mail client is still under development
Yeah the message is misleading, it always says “mod”.
But admins are responsible for their users, no matter where they post. If they’re spamming, shouldn’t their home instance admin ban their whole account, instead of every other instance having to ban them individually?
If you pay with a third party, your data goes to them and whoever is providing the account behind it. So if you have your credit card in PayPal, your data goes to PayPal, the credit card provider, and your bank. If you use the credit card directly, it’s just the CC provider and your bank.
Ok but what do I do when it’s the entire country
When?
It’s a chunk of this: https://www.eso.org/public/images/eso1242a/
It’s not NASA and not the night sky on Mars, let alone what you’d see. It’s not enough to say “don’t believe what you see in Instagram reels”, you should actively disbelieve what you see, especially since Facebook doesn’t give a shit about misinformation. They’d rather have engagement metrics.
Malt what?
Well… back pain is a symptom, so there’s not going to be one magic bullet that cures all the different causes. Sure you can use painkillers, but that’s not actually going to fix anything.
Don’t do this with a herniated disc, it’ll just make it worse.
You can.
I put that music on archive.org too. If there’s no market for selling it, I don’t think there’s much of a legal argument.