>His reasoning for making this program, he wrote, is “to have the right to know on both sides of the marriage.” After public outcry, he later claimed his intention was to allow women, with or without their fiancées, to check if they are on porn sites and to send a copyright takedown request.
This was going to happen one way or the other regardless; I don't understand why it's so important for the author to spin his reasoning for making it.
This was my experience using a Greasemonkey script some time ago. Some posts would "come back", and there were pockets years back it couldn't even find to delete, but were still accessible on my profile. Wound up just deleting my account and making a new one that I never, ever post on.
Technologies: PHP, Laravel, Javascript, JQuery, Magento, HTML/CSS, AJAX, web APIs, RESTful APIs, Bootstrap, MySQL, SQLite, Photoshop, Illustrator, Premiere, and so on
Résumé/CV: email
Email: asdfghjkl1 [at] protonmail (dot) com
I'm looking for a front end development role ideally working with Laravel. I have back end experience as well, but prefer front end layout. I'd also be happy doing design work in addition to development.
Have had Pi-Hole running on an old 10" netbook for a little over a year now. Set it up just to play around with it, wound up being a perfect machine for it.
Agree about ad-blocking on mobile. The killer feature with Pi-Hole is that you don't have to set anything up on each individual device; anything connected to your network suddenly has near flawless adblocking.
The difference, though, is Reddit has no peers. The closest I'm aware of is Voat, which is basically the Isle of Misfit Toys for Reddit's banned hate speech subs.
>1) I'm in a couple specific regional groups that AFAIK have no non-Facebook counterpart (though they easily could). I think Facebook does groups poorly, but they serve the "non-technical community space" use case much better than any other popular offering that I know of.
These used to be called "forums" and were very popular until Facebook invented groups and murdered them all.
Arguably the same rules any subreddit with over a dozen members has broken at some point. You'll probably be linked to a list of posts with few/no upvotes that make "calls to violence". You can easily compile a list like this for any major subreddit on any subject, but people like to harp on T_D because it represents a bias they don't care for.
this is actually why I really like SO. Whenever you have a problem, you'll eventually find one comprehensive thread covering the solution. If they weren't so strict about duplicates or poorly formed questions, they wouldn't have such a strong collection of answers.