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32 votes
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Russians confront wartime internet cuts with public shrug, private fury
38 votes -
A Cloudflare outage is taking down large parts of the internet - X, ChatGPT and more affected
49 votes -
Diagram Website (2023)
21 votes -
Mullvad - Shutting down our search proxy Leta
26 votes -
Aggressive bots ruined my weekend
41 votes -
Wikipedia:Signs of AI writing
65 votes -
SpaceX disables 2,500 Starlink terminals allegedly used by Asian scam centers
22 votes -
Unseeable prompt injections in screenshots: more vulnerabilities in Comet and other AI browsers
35 votes -
Amazon Web Services outage shows internet users ‘at mercy’ of too few providers, experts say
50 votes -
Forgot Chrome's unusable, any recommendations?
I'm streaming Firefox to watch Riverdale, so I opened up Chrome to browse while I wait for them to join. Youtube has ads on it, and I realized I can't grab uBlock or anything (meaningfully)...
I'm streaming Firefox to watch Riverdale, so I opened up Chrome to browse while I wait for them to join. Youtube has ads on it, and I realized I can't grab uBlock or anything (meaningfully) privacy focused. So, I wanna try out one of the cool new browsers, what do people use and recommend?
I'm on Windows and a proper techie, so give me anything that's a bit strange and off the wall as well! The only one I tried out recently was Comet, but it needs more time to bake, total waste of time IME. I remember using IceWeasel for some reason lol
33 votes -
California lets residents opt-out of a ton of data collection on the web
22 votes -
What happens when the internet goes out at your work?
Can you pivot to other tasks, or are you dead in the water? What about others? Your team/department? Tell us what its like for those minutes/hours. How often does the internet drop for you (if at...
Can you pivot to other tasks, or are you dead in the water? What about others? Your team/department? Tell us what its like for those minutes/hours.
How often does the internet drop for you (if at all)?
If you don't ever lose internet at work (lucky you!), answer hypothetically about what would happen.
35 votes -
Botnet blankets US ISPs in record denial-of-service attack
34 votes -
Sora gives deepfakes 'a publicist and a distribution deal.' It could change the internet.
17 votes -
Way past its prime: how did Amazon get so rubbish?
42 votes -
Elon Musk plans to take on Wikipedia with 'Grokipedia'
39 votes -
imgur.com geoblocks the UK
Imgur appears to have geoblocked the UK. This is likely in response to the stupid Online Safety Act (brought in by the previous Conservative government) which requires age verification for "adult"...
Imgur appears to have geoblocked the UK. This is likely in response to the stupid Online Safety Act (brought in by the previous Conservative government) which requires age verification for "adult" content - not just porn, it's a bunch of other poorly defined other stuff too.
My guess, based on very little information because imgur don't appear to have said anything much officially at this point, is they've had a letter from Ofcom (UK telecoms standards agency) and decided an IP ban is easier than compliance and I totally understand their decision. But urgh.
I didn't have much stuff on there and it's all backed up but still. Annoying.
54 votes -
How AI and Wikipedia have sent vulnerable languages into a doom spiral
29 votes -
I tried to protect my kids from the internet. Here’s what happened.
49 votes -
The most fragile gif on the internet
37 votes -
elle's homepage
26 votes -
Farewell to the fediverse
26 votes -
Sweden's employment agency has been tracking the online locations of thousands of citizens claiming unemployment benefits in an effort to crack down on welfare fraud
28 votes -
Wikipedia is resilient because it’s boring
80 votes -
Atlassian acquires The Browser Company (Arc, Dia)
28 votes -
Blogging service TypePad is shutting down and taking all blog content with it
19 votes -
Question about Marginalia Search
12 votes -
Seeking advice for back-up internet connection at home
Hello, Tildes Tech Support Team, I'm doing some Homelab stuff. And I'm looking for a way to set up an inexpensive back-up Internet connection. Less about having a connection when I'm home and...
Hello, Tildes Tech Support Team,
I'm doing some Homelab stuff. And I'm looking for a way to set up an inexpensive back-up Internet connection. Less about having a connection when I'm home and Internet goes out (Phone hotspot works in a pinch), but more about getting in and getting statuses of stuff when I'm not home and Internet drops.
For background, I have a Ubiquiti Unifi Dream Machine Pro that can do WAN failover. My primary Internet connection is through Verizon Fios. The UDM and the Fios ONT are directly connected via ethernet; I'm not using Verizon's crappy home router. Also, I rarely lose Internet connectivity. This really is just a Homelab experiment to see if it can be done.
I've seen some stuff about getting a cheap, refurb smartphone and a cheap MVNO plan like Google Fi that nets me a handful of GB a month, and then tethering the UDM to the phone somehow (maybe through some cheap router in bridge/passthrough mode like a GLinet travel router). Has anyone had any experience doing this?
But...I actually have a secondary Internet connection already. My apartment complex has WiFi across the complex and for each unit. That I unfortunately have to pay for, even though I don't use it -- I want FULL control over my home network. But since I do have it, is there a way I can take advantage of this? I'm thinking something like a reverse AP, if that exists. But it has to pass through the IP from the apartment WiFi.
I know there will likely be issues with double NATing. But depending on the services/things I'm trying to access or keep access to, that may not be a factor. Like my Unifi hardware talking with the Unifi cloud access stuff. I think double NAT shouldn't matter.
Anyway, appreciate whatever you all got!
15 votes -
One Million Screenshots
31 votes -
Germany legal case alleging adblockers violate copyright
53 votes -
Which other sites do you visit?
The internet is starting to feel smaller and smaller, or at least the content I find is less interesting or created with the goal to be sponsored. Nowadays, I basically consume downloaded content,...
The internet is starting to feel smaller and smaller, or at least the content I find is less interesting or created with the goal to be sponsored.
Nowadays, I basically consume downloaded content, books, shows, mainly old stuff found on the internet archive
Which other sites do you find interesting and worth it?
71 votes -
Why the internet really wants your ID... (and why now?)
52 votes -
While Finnish students learn how to discern fact from fiction online, media literacy experts say AI-specific training should be guaranteed going forward
11 votes