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02:39
the whole thing should be deleted exactly because it is a typo, and it's a little concerning that it's gotten 1k views. presumably people run into the same problem for other reasons, and are clickbaited, perhaps even led away from the right question
 
9 hours later…
11:40
0
Q: Should I "plagiarize"?

Streve FordI looked at a few close entries here in meta, and they don't quite answer my question. Let's say I look at a question that already has some comments containing suggestions and maybe an answer or two. And while I think the answers have useful information, I still think more should be said. I could...

11:52
0
Q: Group save question to easily change list

PYFI would like to propose a new feature to the "save question and answer page". When I save a question, it automatically move to "For later". Then if I save a lot of question about something, I would have to move each question, one by one, into a list I created. It would be nice, if we could select...

12:34
-2
Q: Save question in more than one list

PYFSimple suggestion. It could be nice to have the possibility to save a question or an answer in more than just one created list.

 
1 hour later…
13:46
-1
Q: Why I stopped loving StackOverflow

Leos LiterakI have noticed that over time, StackOverflow became a place where I don't feel safe and comfortable. I can write a question with a lot of source code, logs and clear question, though I will expect a downvote and/or close vote. Some people love to bug others without any constructive feedback and m...

 
5 hours later…
18:16
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Q: Staging ground --- suddelnly not able to see questions the normal way

Gyro GearlooseAll of a sudden, I'm on "staging ground". I commented a question, but cannot see it the normal way. I don't even know if it is possible to have a link/reference to it. What is that all about? What am I missing? I hope this was not an update by Cloudstrike.

@NewPosts "I hope this was not an update by Cloudstrike." I wonder how people think this up even though they seem to have some programming knowledge
 
1 hour later…
19:23
I also notice that "Cloudstrike" seems to be a common mistyping of "CrowdStrike".
Crowdstrike, cloudflare, basically the same thing
Both of them are companies with far too much market share to the point where bugs have taken down critical digital infrastructure
OK, true. TBH, I was more curious about the phenomena linguistically. "crowd" is close to pronouncing "cloud". There is probably a term for that in linguistics.
:D
But more seriously: I feel like the CrowdStrike thing might be monumental in history. It might be used to impose legislation on software development.
probably
But unfortunately, I doubt it'll be consumer- and competition-oriented legislation
The internet benefits from being decentralised. Maybe not web3 cryptobro blockchain-decentralised, but not having one service operate the cloud infrastructure for the vast majority of traffic in some or another way is probably not a good idea
19:30
Also, I'm interested in what happens with the company. I mean, if the whole world sues it for damages, then the company is gone. But also, that means all the parties have to find another vendor, too. And I assure you that those vendors would be hit with a lot of requirements from their new clients for safety.
imagine if we found out the code that caused it was untested AI code
@Zoe-Savethedatadump Mmmm.... web-monopolism
@VLAZ yeahh, at the very least some kind of legislation requiring a self-hosting option for sufficiently large monopolies would add an extra layer of security particularly to financially critical infrastructure
Assuming they don't forcibly wire in an auto-updating system, which would defeat the purpose of any attempt to do that
With the exception of at least consumer-facing DNS servers (i.e. 1.1.1.1, 9.9.9.9, etc.) and the DNS root servers, there's very little where the case can be made the servers have to be owned by a centralised entity in order to provide whatever service
like, Crowdstrike could've offered a self-hosted update server, where local sysadmins can then do their own testing before pushing to prod across the entire organisation. Even if disregarding universally breaking bugs, it's possible that an organisation does some weird shit that interacts weirdly with a crowdstrike update, for example
It's a real shame that the decentralised nature of the internet has been killed by megacorporations, including attempts to maintain some of the decentralisation. Stuff like self-hosting email is basically impossible because of extremely aggressive spam filters. You basically need to either give up, or pay for an SMTP relay service to piggyback off a well-established email provider
Specifically re: email, cfenollosa.com/blog/… is a really good read
> No need to trust my word. Google has half a billion results for "my email goes directly to spam". 
Search any technical forum on the internet and you will find plenty of legitimate people complaining that their emails are not delivered.

What's the usual answer from experienced sysadmins? "Stop self-hosting your email and pay [provider]."

Having to pay Big Tech to ensure deliverability is unfair, especially since lots of sites self-host their emails for multiple reasons; one of which is cost.
What's even more fun is that Google is hosting many of the load-bearing internet services. Imagine if they killed gmail, for example

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