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18 votes
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US Attorney General and officials from UK and Australia will ask Facebook to halt plans for end-to-end encryption in its messaging apps
10 votes -
Facebook launches "Threads from Instagram", a new camera-first messaging app
5 votes -
Neo Cab | Release trailer
5 votes -
The awkward questions about slavery from tourists in the US South
18 votes -
Jews and Muslims in Sweden outraged over call to ban male circumcision
17 votes -
Politics and the English language
11 votes -
Social Networks or Social Nightmares? with Roger McNamee, Max Schrems and Evgeny Morozov
3 votes -
The story of the IBM Pentium 4 64-bit CPU
7 votes -
Four police officers killed in knife attack at police HQ in Paris
12 votes -
PostgreSQL 12 released
5 votes -
Norway's fifth and newest Unicef ambassador is 15-year-old Penelope Lea – the second-youngest ambassador of all time and the first climate activist to be chosen
8 votes -
Things chefs do that you should not do: Just say no to lemon zest, “ripping hot” pans, and the ice bath
18 votes -
Finland's papers are dominated on Thursday by President Sauli Niinistö's extraordinary meeting with his US counterpart Donald Trump
9 votes -
This is what a "second-person" video game would look like
16 votes -
Lua 5.4.0 (Beta)
7 votes -
Meal-kit delivery teardown: Blue Apron vs. HelloFresh
8 votes -
Interview with Hou Yifan, the number one female chess player in the world, on growing up as a prodigy in China, the gender gap and more
10 votes -
‘I am not my husband's handbag’ – Iceland's first lady, Eliza Reid speaks out about her incredibly weird job
4 votes -
Samuel Morland, Magister Mechanicorum
5 votes -
Red to green: The stark evolution of Christchurch's abandoned acres
12 votes -
What if the US were treated like the rogue nation it is?
12 votes -
Who favors unbreakable commercial encryption?
9 votes -
360° view of Hong Kong’s National Day turmoil: Thomas Boarder shot a 360° frontline, 2k-resolution feature from the protests on Hong Kong Island, taking a blast from the water cannon in the process.
7 votes -
Interview with one of the developers of Interslavic: the constructed language used in "The Painted Bird" which aims to be mutually intelligible with all Slavic languages.
9 votes -
Watch enthusiasts/collectors
Do we have any watch enthusiasts or collectors on here ?. I’m more of an enthusiast than a collector, i do owned a couple but wouldn’t call it a Collection.
10 votes -
Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress bomber crashes at Hartford airport; at least seven reported dead
17 votes -
US hits Scotch whisky, Italian cheese, French wine, and other European products with 25% tariffs
12 votes -
Should I get into Gentoo?
I've been using Linux for the past 5 to 10 years. I'm not a developer, but a mid-to-advanced user. I don't really know bash (or any programming language for that matter), but I got a folder with...
I've been using Linux for the past 5 to 10 years. I'm not a developer, but a mid-to-advanced user. I don't really know bash (or any programming language for that matter), but I got a folder with 100 bash scripts I wrote myself. I compile my own Emacs (which I configured from scratch and contains more than 200 crudes functions of my own), Neovim (also configured from scratch) and other programs such as suckless terminal. I'm an i3wm user and currently use MX-Linux. I'm very good at Googling and pattern recognition.
I got a brand new AMD desktop with a Ryzen processor (no dedicated graphics, wifi works fine with a USB adapter). Should I try Gentoo, or maybe I should study more (maybe with something like Linux Journey)in order to get a better experience?
Reasons to install Gentoo:
- Learning experience
- A completely customized desktop experience
- Never having to reinstall my operating system again
- Masochism
- Putting my powerful processor to work
- It seems cool (and less painful than LFS)
- Some hypothetical performance gain
3 votes -
Elevator hacking: From the pit to the penthouse
16 votes -
Iraq blocks Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp and Instagram, then shuts down internet amid civil unrest
27 votes -
The Ocean Cleanup device is finally catching plastic
13 votes -
What games have you been playing, and what's your opinion on them?
What have you been playing lately? Discussion about video games and board games are both welcome. Please don't just make a list of titles, give some thoughts about the game(s) as well.
19 votes -
How much faster is Redis at storing a blob of JSON compared to PostgreSQL?
6 votes -
How a double-free bug in WhatsApp for Android could be turned into a remote code execution vulnerability
6 votes -
Doctors working for the Department for Work and Pensions must respect a service user's pronoun choice
This is a bit complicated. The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) is the government department that pays social security benefits in the UK. There are a range of benefits. Some of these...
This is a bit complicated.
The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) is the government department that pays social security benefits in the UK. There are a range of benefits. Some of these benefits are for people who cannot work because of disability. In order to qualify for some of these disability benefits you need to have a medical assessment with an "independent" doctor. This doctor is independent from the patient. They're employed by companies who are paid by the DWP, so there's supposed to be some kind of arm's length arrangement there.
A doctor was employed by one of these companies to do this assessment work for the DWP. He was a committed Christian. He held that he would not be able to refer to people by anything other than the gender they were assigned at birth.
The DWP is clear: you must respect a person's choice of pronouns.
The General Medical Council (the registrant body for doctors in England) is also clear: you must not impose your personal views upon your patients, especially if it's going to cause distress.
This doctor was spoken to about his beliefs. He declined to change his stance. He lost his job. He took his employer to employment tribunal for unfair dismissal based on discrimination against his protected characteristic: his religious views.
He lost his case.
Here's the legal document: https://christianconcern.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/CC-Resource-Judgment-Mackereth-DWP-Others-ET-191002.pdf
It's pretty long! 42 pages! The last pages give a summary.
You'll notice the URL. He was supported by the Christian Legal Centre. I won't say anything about them, but I'll link this page which gives some useful information: https://nearlylegal.co.uk/2018/04/on-the-naughty-step-the-questionable-ethics-of-the-christian-legal-centre/
8 votes -
Fall 2019 Premiere Reviews - Anime Feminist
7 votes -
To make Later Alligator, Smallbu had to wrestle with game design
3 votes -
Charming pixel art game Yes, Your Grace re-emerges after years of silence
5 votes -
CSS is weird because it's solving a weird problem: what does it mean to design for an infinite and unknown canvas?
12 votes -
The sun sets on We - The story of WeWork's IPO postponement and CEO ouster
11 votes -
Microsoft announces new Surface lineup, including two new dual-screen devices, one of which is an Android phone
25 votes -
Global stocks sell off as economic fears mount
11 votes -
Transgender man who gave birth must be registered as "mother" on the birth certificate
11 votes -
Microsoft Surface Neo first look: The future of Windows 10X is dual-screen
9 votes -
What is your dream job ?
What is your dream job maybe the one you have now or one you would like to get in the future?
26 votes -
Is programming science?
There's no doubt computer science is indeed a science, but what about programming itself? Does it fulfill the basic requirements that make something a science? I'm not an academic, just trying to...
There's no doubt computer science is indeed a science, but what about programming itself? Does it fulfill the basic requirements that make something a science? I'm not an academic, just trying to start a conversation.
In many ways, programming is like Math: a means to an end. And Math is a science. Like math, programming has several fields with vastly different ideas of what constitutes programming. Because it is applied logic, programming is also provable and disprovable. There are many disputing hypothesis and, even though absolute truth is a distant dream, it is certain that some sentences are truer than others. Again, like Math, Programming has many practical applications, such as finances and engineering.
Some people consider Math a propaedeutics: not a science in itself, but a discipline that provides fundamentals to actual sciences such as chemistry and physics. The same reasoning could be applied to programming, as nothing more than a tool for computer science. I personally think there's something unique about programming and it's problem-solving methods that can be considered a field of its own.
What you guys and girls think?
6 votes -
Bernie Sanders hospitalized for blocked artery, had two stents inserted; campaign events canceled until further notice
38 votes -
Samsung Galaxy Fold review: The $2,000 phone of the future is here—please don’t break it
4 votes -
Denmark's new government to boost spending after years of austerity, following a campaign pledge to reverse years of cuts by previous administrations
6 votes