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Rinsing your dishes before putting them in the dishwasher is actually a good idea if the dishes are very dirty though…
Rinsing your dishes before putting them in the dishwasher is actually a good idea if the dishes are very dirty though…
Don’t flush kitchen tissue though, it doesn’t disintegrate as toiletpaper does.
I thought I smelt something funky when reading that bait.
Even worse, the CVE is effectively “if you use the package wrong, you get weird results”.
The affected method has signature function isPrivate(ip: string): boolean
. Passing in a hex number is not a string, and a method (toString
) exists for this.
The former, unfortunately.
“you’ve seen our war crimes, now you’re no longer welcome here”
As if you’d go be a tourist in a country, just after you’ve seen solders of said country commit, or politicians and citizens actively defend war crimes. Plenty of pretty cool other things to see.
The EU is could very much send them right back where they came from, but they don’t
That’s only for the war refugees. Sending people back to, say, Eritrea, would mean they’d be executed for leaving the country (which is illegal there).
Those only represent a tiny fraction of the immigrants though, and they’re not the ones “taking all the jobs”, that’s the worker immigrants.
For DNS and DDoS protection that wouldn’t directly be an issue.
For caching it would be breaking. You cannot cache what you cannot read (encrypted traffic can only be cached by the decrypting party).
I would expect that that 90’s car would eventually be able to be converted to hydrogen combustion. That would save on pumping up petrol (if the hydrogen is not generated with petrol) and it would not cost yet another car to be created.
You don’t have to be PCI compliant for stuff like bank transfers or other forms of payment. Credit cards aren’t the default payment method everywhere.
Maybe it’s pay on pickup, or just a simple mail with sepa wire transfer instructions.
Also, the PSP can still use JS but your site still doesn’t need to have it. Services like Mollie and Stripe offer checkout environments they host, meaning you still don’t have to use JS on your site.
You can’t get around JavaScript, it’s impossible to build a functioning online store without some kind of JS.
Well, sure you can. It will just be a pain to use for your users, especially when validation comes into play.
But a simple list with an “add to chart” button really won’t need any javascript.
The posts aren’t constraining the information though. They’re effectively advertisements linking to the information (advertising they have info for you to read).
The information itself is public and freely accessible.
You don’t. They’re usually posting awareness campaigns that link to government sites.
I’ve opted the example to elsewhere, but they’d be like “bought a house? Find out how the taxes work on (link)”
It is, they’re usually posts like “bought your first house? Find out how housing taxes work on rijksoverheid.nl”.
The Dutch government seems to be pretty stringent on their single source of truth policy on the web.
the worst are the black and one always looking for troubles
BLACK AND WHAT!?
fine. keep your secrets.
No, the title is subjective. It would be something like “court upholds fine”, nof “not hear out a party” since there’s often no room for a defence.
Highest courts are usually acting upon a “this judgement is faulty, because they didn’t allow x” or “… didn’t consider y”. Not “… they disagreed with my opinion”.
The latter is still done by old code and outdated management that thinks disabling the clipboard is “more secure”. It’s fucking infuriating.
tar -extract -any -file is easier, auto detect the compression based on filename.
A year lasts longer