Is that why I got cloudflare banned last night? All I did was click my Local Top Day bookmark.
Is that why I got cloudflare banned last night? All I did was click my Local Top Day bookmark.
I like how they made helping Reddit improve to be optional. I suspect I’m not the only one who doesn’t feel inclined to help them in any way.
How is it legal to make up a fee then offer a paid membership to avoid the fee you just made up? How is that different from the mob guys that would collect your “insurance” membership so that you didn’t incur a “business burned down” fee?
It would only work if enough people do it to show up on their metrics.
Report issue. You’re not running an adblocker! wink
Google already has trouble with support, if they have a million lightly befuddled users who are getting blocked and “don’t know why”, that will be a problem for Google.
I sort of had an intuition that the people I want to talk to, the people I enjoyed talking to over there, would also be the ones who made the choice to come here.
What does the hair dryer do with all the water??
I watched this happen on the britishcolumbia sub. They got too many reports or something about misinformation (my memory is unclear about this point, but there was some dispute about misinformation), so the admins closed the sub, posted a message asking for the community to select moderators, then completely forgot about the whole thing. The sub (a sub for an entire Canadian province) was closed for like six weeks. Then some random did a reddit request and they gave it to him, not the mods the community voted on. This random waited for a while, then started letting racist stuff through, and booted the old mods who objected to the racist stuff he was allowing. And Reddit made it all happen.
The idea of Reddit replacing even a hundred mods, in a single day, with anyone capable of the job, is laughable. They couldn’t do a single sub in over six weeks, and even after six weeks they fucked it up.
Por que no los dos? If they want to send me to collections for the 25 cents of API I use, to shitpost over the next few days till I delete my account, then hey, that’s even more bad management. I’ll have the collection letter framed.
idk, but somehow I did
They don’t have a payment method for me, so gl getting me to pay that bill, anyways. I think I’d rather go to collections than give Reddit a dime.
Does that mean Reddit will be sending us fat API bills for using our own API key?
I want one that’s already ‘there’. I appreciate the work and sacrifice early adopters are doing to help me get there.
So far I’ve avoiding learning about Docker by just buying a new old end-of-life Chromebook when I wanted to run anything. Works pretty well, except for the giant pile of Chromebooks behind my TV.
I actually have Portainer set up and running, and I even spun up a few simple containers in it. Unfortunately I did so by following a guide to complete a specific task. I completed the task successfully, but now I have a Portainer install that I don’t understand in the slightest, and don’t know how to update it or any of the containers in it, or really do anything that wasn’t covered in the guide I followed (which I now cannot find). I found a YouTube video that tries to explain Portainer, but I don’t know the terminology of Docker enough to understand what they are saying, and I haven’t found a Docker video simple enough to bring me up to speed.
Just trying to get a sense if it’s worth bothering with my 10Mbit up.
Is there any use to spinning up an instance, only allowing say 10 people max, then just keep it updated and let it run, to take the load of those ten people off the bigger instances? Is that too small time to be useful? I have pretty weak upload.
What are your thoughts on communities about drugs? Pretty big topic for me, although the drug subs mostly haven’t moved here yet, is that because you ban them? If so, I’m wasting my time waiting for them here.