

AUR is still working as intended. It’s basically a public wiki of shell scripts, it was never intended to be secure in the first place. It has always been the user’s responsibility to review everything or avoid using it.


AUR is still working as intended. It’s basically a public wiki of shell scripts, it was never intended to be secure in the first place. It has always been the user’s responsibility to review everything or avoid using it.


It’s basically a public wiki of scripts, being editable by anyone is the entire point. If you don’t want to run random scripts from random people, don’t use AUR.


I’ve been accidentally boycotting Xbox for the past 20 years because they never had anything appealing in the first place.
They’ve already said there won’t be a sub fee.

People told you AI would break shit. You used AI and it broke shit. You then failed review the broken things and also failed to test them, and then released it to everyone. Get off the high horse.
While it’s true that nobody is owed anything by an open source project, the appropriate response here is still to apologize for your poor judgement, and to discuss how you’ll be improving your processes to prevent this from happening again, not “lol I’ll do it again”.
Anyone relying on this tool should start migrating to one of the many alternatives.


AI pre-installed 🤮


Don’t fight… you both suck equally.


Miss me with this “slippery slope” BS.
Having a standardized place to store the DOB is a good thing and it should have been there even before these laws.
And if some users want to comply with those laws, then they should have a way to do it.
If anybody actually tries to make this a hard requirement (which isn’t going to happen), then you can bitch about it at that time.


Yes, right next to the fields for your full name and address, all of which are optional. It’s a total nothingburger.


Some “cards” are NFC-only


These kind of exploits have always been common. The only thing that changed is people talking about them.


If they can already read/write all of your user’s files, then an attacker doesn’t even care about root access anyway most of the time anyway.
It’s really only relevant for things like web servers.


And here I was worried they would pick another terrible name.


No, Flatpak limitations literally make it impossible to get all Discord features working. It’s not a problem with the config, it’s a design flaw of Flatpak itself.
So in other words, it fixes all of the shit that makes Flatpak broken and useless?


This is the boot loader, not related to the init system


There it is, the reason the service failed in the first place, because everyone could see this coming.
Roku still exists?