You can block users, communities and instances in your account's settings, but you can't filter domains themselves in posts or comments on the Lemmy UI. However, some mobile apps provide that ability.
I think ming is like 5 years old and still going.
I have the Black & Green limited edition from their Kickstarter.
EDIT: wow, I just checked in my emails and I received it in November 2014. That's a long-lasting and durable wallet 🤯
My keychain
- Car key
- House key
- Community mailbox key
- Chipolo One Point
- A Geekey-like tool (found a cheap copycat on Amazon)
- SIM tray eject tool
- Yubikey 5C NFC
My wallet (Slim Fold Micro)
- 1 credit card
- 1 debit card
- $20 cash for emergencies
- health insurance card
- driver's license
- public transportation card
- veteran card
Other
- SafeX Mini Box Cutter
- Smartphone (Pixel 7 Pro)
- Cheap-ass bluetooth earphones
- Work security badge
Unless you are in control of the encryption keys (E2EE), assume that everything stored there can be read and accessing by Google.
Spoiler, it's just a big
🏳️
On the other hand, if you use an old technology that isn't being mass produced anymore, it can reach a point where it will become a big liability for a mission-critical piece of equipment.
Updated to 0.0.48
, thanks for the reminder :)
I'm looking at making a custom CloudFlare error page that embeds the status page. At least we'll be able to put some communication there when something happens without people having to guess where to go.
So you're telling me Biden could imprison SCOTUS and he'd be free from prosecution?
Storing the encryption keys in the Credentials Manager (Windows) or the Keychain (macOS, Linux) would be a better choice than a plaintext file.
And using Bitlocker / VeraCrypt / Filevault / LUKS will at least protect the data at rest.
But as you said, it's game over if the machine is compromised.