I'd be able to do it easily and sleep at night like a baby.
How many hours, days, weeks, months, and years did he steal from the people who bought crypto in FTX? Most of them were workers, using their wages (which means trading their working hours for money) to buy crypto. How many years of their time did he lose?
If there was real justice in the world, they'd take the amount of money he lost, divide it by the average hourly rate of the account holders, convert that to years, and then make him serve each and every single one.
The number of years of savings he stole from people is less than the maximum time he can get in prison, so if anything, he's getting off light.
If there were justice in this world his mind would be put in a simulation and he'd be forced to do all of the things that the people who lost money did to get theirs in real time. Let him feel that loss before you then wake him up and make him spend the rest of his time in prison.
"Simply add screenshot and screen capture functionality to your favorite compositor and add a code path in your app to detect what compositor you're using at runtime and call the right methods" - Wayland developers
Better hope the compositor of the week you're using that hasn't yet been abandoned is based on wlroots so you have some chance of it working.
The tooling around Perl has also gotten better over the last decade or so while also allowing you to pack everything to run on even ancient machines running old Perl 5.
I recently watched "Gone with the Wind" with some friends. In hindsight, it's nothing more than Lost Cause propaganda, but I don't think it should be revised. It should be shown in context with the history of the Lost Cause at the time and with what the reality of the war actually was about.
>Under X11, you are basically running every application with root, always.
This is not even remotely true. You are able to snoop on events that use the X server - typically programs run as your user or programs that you have chosen to forward to your X server.
You are correct that the X server gets all events from all clients and therefore can log keys.
XFCE works fine under X11. Stay with X11 in that case, but it's incredibly arrogant and dismissive of the Wayland folks to say "your use case will work under Wayland, you have no excuses" and then also say "well, actually, it will work if you force your upstream to port your DE to it".
Doubly funny when it first came out because IIRC Slackware ha just released a new version