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cnst

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Synthetic Fragrance Is Dangerous. The New Second Hand Smoke

colevannote.com
2 points·by cnst·قبل 11 يومًا·4 comments

Plaintiffs allege the use of scents discriminates against them under the Ada

law.com
5 points·by cnst·قبل 11 يومًا·2 comments

The lack of reliable financial infrastructure

tumblr.com
3 points·by cnst·قبل 5 أشهر·0 comments

Why use mailing lists?

mailarchive.ietf.org
248 points·by cnst·قبل 10 أشهر·197 comments

Techies vs. the People That Matter

cybersect.substack.com
5 points·by cnst·قبل 10 أشهر·0 comments

comments

cnst
·قبل 10 أيام·discuss
Honestly, I'd rather my 0.1% in rent would go to these lawyers than to the scent machine companies.

I'm very surprised it even took that long for this to happen. These laws have been on the books for decades, and the scent-free policies have been popping up like flowers ever since the 2009 CDC policy that went as far as prohibit using scented detergent for clothing worn to work (a little extreme, sure, but, at the very least, doing an extra rinse cycle does help a lot).

Many of these policies are more about awareness and civil rights than actual enforcement. If these policies are normalised and seen by everyone, it removes the friction from people for whose benefit these policies were created. So then if you actually need it enforced, it wouldn't be a surprise to anyone of your need for the policy to be enforced.
cnst
·قبل 10 أيام·discuss
They may be stretching a bit, but the statistics is still on their side, and their filings are very explicit that they actually demand compliance (sure, they probably had to add that for some legitimacy, but they did add that nonetheless).
cnst
·قبل 11 يومًا·discuss
This filing is worth a read for the entire situation:

* https://colevannote.com/wp-content/uploads/CMP_Greystar.pdf

For those unaware, Greystar is a major property management company in the US for residential apartments:

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greystar

It's a great summary of the issues. Some of the less talked about points is an outsized disparate impact of these scent machines on reportedly 85.4% of autistic individuals, as pointed in the opening statement of this lawsuit, which I'm sure many HN readers could certainly relate to.
cnst
·قبل 11 يومًا·discuss
Found the non-paywall original:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48734824
cnst
·قبل 11 يومًا·discuss
I recently learned that the CDC has adopted an "Indoor Environmental Quality Policy" in 2009 that has the following text:

> In addition, CDC encourages employees to be as fragrance-free as possible when they arrive in the workplace. Fragrance is not appropriate for a professional work environment, and the use of some products with fragrance may be detrimental to the health of workers with chemical sensitivities, allergies, asthma, and chronic headaches/migraines. Employees should avoid scented detergents and fabric softeners on clothes worn to the office. Many fragrance-free personal care and laundry products are easily available and provide safer alternatives.

The most interesting bits:

> Fragrance is not appropriate for a professional work environment

> Employees should avoid scented detergents and fabric softeners on clothes worn to the office.
cnst
·قبل شهرين·discuss
Resume Driven Development is why fundamentally people like Steve Jobs and Elon Musk are crucial to ensuring the enshitification is kept in check.

Elon Musk may be a bad example in this situation, because he's actually a fan of removing the extra controls and the physical buttons, but at least their UX is far-far better than any of the legacy manufacturers.
cnst
·قبل شهرين·discuss
IIRC, MasterCard SecureCode and Visa's verified-by-visa were more of a thing in the US maybe like decade or two ago? I think NewEgg and B&H did support it at one point? Afterwards, everyone has simply disabled the thing, and you simply get a wave-through by most issuers when shopping on foreign sites, where you get redirected to issuer's website, then back to the online shop, without having to type or confirm anything.

Back when it was a thing, it was quite a nightmare, where you had to register for a 3ds account, often separate from your normal online account, and keep a separate password etc. Then those iframe windows look exactly like the phishing websites, too.

Honestly, it's much ado about nothing. If the transaction is suspicious or likely fraudulent, today, you already get an SMS or an alert within bank's app on your phone. All you have to do is confirm and retry the transaction a minute later. This works for both in-person transactions, as well as remote ones, with the same flow, unlike 3ds, which only works for online shopping.
cnst
·قبل شهرين·discuss
I think during the OVH fire, it was the smoke damage that was deemed to have damaged a lot of the servers.

Fans and cooling might be affected by all the debris. Spinning rust drives often have breathing holes, too.
cnst
·قبل شهرين·discuss
This doesn't even touch the entire resume-driven development issue.

The vast majority of all websites today, are designed in such a way as to tout the resumes of all the people responsible for the site with all the latest buzzwords. Content hidden under drop-down menus noone cares about and which makes things very hard to find, pointless animation here and there, pointless custom zoom logic that doesn't work properly on the big screens, all the latest frameworks to display a few tables of text, progressive loading and pagination for the simplest of data (like the banking transactions of a consumer credit card) that in the old days could have simply been displayed on a single page etc.
cnst
·قبل شهرين·discuss
An underrated comment. But sunlight is the best disinfectant.

I think it's the fundamental issue with these cameras, that it takes pictures of us, but we ourselves cannot access it. Even though it was us who has paid for it!
cnst
·قبل شهرين·discuss
These things just prove that the entire "security" industry is a sham.

At one point, every bank would ensure that your password COULD NOT be saved by your browser, because sEcUrItY.

Which is precisely the scenario where typing your password into a site like this is possible.
cnst
·قبل 3 أشهر·discuss
I think the problem here is that all of these services are optimising for the biggest "change-at-all-cost" that there could be.

If you have a service that does one thing, and does it good, and provides backwards compatibility, it cannot change every day. But if it doesn't change every day, then it's labelled as "obsolete" by those who go after the latest and greatest. If it just works and doesn't require adapting on every level, then those that are after the resume-driven-development, aren't "learning", and thus, again, those services are "old and obsolete".

But you can't have both the "change" and the "stability", something has got to give.
cnst
·قبل 3 أشهر·discuss
They're so infamous that their infamy even has its own Wikipedia page!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Controversies_surrounding_GoDa...

And them blocking entire countries from their website and DNS isn't even mentioned in your list or the page!
cnst
·قبل 3 أشهر·discuss
Apparently, GoDaddy is so infamous that their infamy has its own Wikipedia page!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Controversies_surrounding_GoDa...
cnst
·قبل 3 أشهر·discuss
There's been a story a few years ago that GoDaddy was blacklisting entire countries not only from their own website, but also from the DNS provided to their customers.

So, at a minimum, your website and email may not work worldwide if you're using the DNS disservice of GoDaddy.

I would NEVER use GoDaddy as a registrar, but if somehow that was a necessity, I would 100% NEVER use their DNS.
cnst
·قبل 3 أشهر·discuss
GoDaddy has also been blocking entire countries from being able to access all services.

And to make it far worse, IIRC, at a certain point, those blocks applied not only to GoDaddy's own website, but even to the DNS services that are provided for the customers, e.g., your own website wouldn't necessarily work from the "wrong" country, either.

Honestly, I dunno why anyone would use their services. High price, very low value.
cnst
·قبل 5 أشهر·discuss
They've changed usernames they use to post under. That's the only "altered" allegation they've been accused of.

BTW, they also alter paywalls and other elements, because otherwise, many websites won't show the main content these days.

It kind of seems like "altered" is the new "hacker" today?
cnst
·قبل 5 أشهر·discuss
> Change the original source to something that doesn't need an archive (e.g., a source that was printed on paper), or for which a link to an archive is only a matter of convenience.

They're basically recommending changing verifiable references that can easily be cross-checked and verified, to "printed on paper" sources that could likely never be verified by any other Wikipedian, and can easily be used to provide a falsification and bias that could go unnoticed for extended periods of time.

Honestly, that's all you need to know about Wikipedia.

The "altered" allegation is also disingenuous. The reason archive.org never works, is precisely because it doesn't alter the pages enough. There's no evidence that archive.today has altered any actual main content they've archived; altering the hidden fields, usernames and paywalls, as well as random presentation elements to make the page look properly, doesn't really count as "altered" in my book, yet that's precisely what the allegation amounts to.
cnst
·قبل 5 أشهر·discuss
It's because it's actively maintained, and bypassing the paywalls is its whole selling point, thus, they do have to be good at it.

They bypass the rendering issues by "altering" the webpages. It's not uncommon to archive a page, and see nothing because of the paywalls; but then later on, the same page is silently fixed. They have a Tumblr where you can ask them questions; at one point, it's been quite common for everyone to ask them to fix random specific pages, which they did promptly.

Honestly, you cannot archive a modern page, unless you alter it. Yet they're now being attacked under the pretence of "altering" webpages, but that's never been a secret, and it's technologically impossible to archive without altering.
cnst
·قبل 6 أشهر·discuss
Immutability and reproducibility is great. Depending on unreliable and antiquated hardware, like the USB key sticks, is not.

Who exactly has the environment where you can add, let alone promptly repair/replace, USB key sticks, on your server? Or run PXE when you have just a single server? How exactly do you do that in Hetzner or OVH? Let alone any other service where you get just a single dedicated server or two.

So, we're big enough to have our own quarter-rack in a collocation facility, let's do PXE. Now you have to have a whole separate infrastructure server, just for your other servers to be able to boot properly? (And how exactly does that server itself boot?) Plus, have an extra infra server for redundancy?

Sorry, but this is the reason noone would use SmartOS. You can't build a fortress on such a shaky foundation.

It's simply out of touch with the target market. At least with FreeBSD or OpenBSD, you known it'll just work™ on any single server, as long as serial console access is available, which is standard-enough. Going against the mainstream of Linux is already hard-enough, there's no reason to make it any harder.

SmartOS sounds like a lot of work, for negligible or even negative benefit.

There's zero good reasons why any machine with 450GB+ of zfs-backed redundant storage, needs to rely on USB keys or networking, in order to function properly. There's a reason Samsung's Joyent entirely abandoned and divested of SmartOS, because this sort of over-engineered mentality, simply doesn't compute. It prevents all sorts of usecases, and even with a growth mindset, still prevents the organic growth from a couple of servers to a rack and more.