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Joined 22 days ago
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Cake day: January 29th, 2026

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  • Copy pasting a comment that I saw on Reddit

    ——

    Link to the original study (with a less sensationalized title):

    https://zkae.io/

    A few important notes:

    • the study is about Bitwarden, LastPass, Dashlane and 1Password. Proton Pass isn’t mentioned.

    • the study presumes that they’re working with a malicious server (read this as compromised server, controlled by an attacker). The attacks they talk about in the article would not work on a normal server. Here’s their quote:

    No need to panic: all of our attacks presume a malicious server. We have no reason to believe that the password manager vendors are currently malicious or compromised, and as long as things stay that way, your passwords are safe. That said, password managers are high-value targets, and breaches do happen.

    • Here’s another quote, about other password managers:

    You can ask your provider the following questions:

    1. ⁠Do you offer end-to-end encryption? What security do you provide in case your server infrastructure were to be compromised?
    1. How do you check that public keys and public-key ciphertexts are authentic?
    1. How do you authenticate security-critical settings, such as the KDF type and the iteration count?
    1. Do you provide integrity guarantees for a user’s vault as a whole? Can a malicious server add items to your vault?

    You can also ask your favourite password manager to commission an audit checking for our attacks in their products.

    • If you still feel unsure/unsafe, then adopt an offline password manager (I highly recommend keepassXC).

  • You’re right, this is normal. Off the top of my head:

    • tempura originated because of the trade between the portuguese and japanese

    • portuguese monopoly on cinnamon trade with Sri Lanka and India, allowed Europe to get it for cheap and it became a main ingredient in a lot of desserts and confections

    • the UKs tea culture came from a portugese noblewoman, who learned it from China

    Cultures are constantly taking ideas from each orher


  • I don’t have much experience with that community, but from the little I’ve seen, agreed. It’s not good.

    A good forum design will only get you so far, the rest is up to the moderators. If you let bad actors in, it doesn’t matter how you designed your forum, they will poison the well and drive other people out.

    The best communities I’ve been in are in independent old-style forums. One of them is Tildes. Most of these don’t feature downvotes (or upvotes for that matter) and are honestly the better places to have discussions IMO.









  • irate944@piefed.socialtoMemes@sopuli.xyzYou earned some more dislikes
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    11 days ago

    I will basically always happily downvote people whining about downvotes. Especially if the whining is preemptive.

    Considering the point of the comment - and the post being about downvotes - my edit was meant to illustrate the point, not to whine.

    Regardless, about another thing that I feel is more relevant:

    If I were going to turn every downvote into a conversation I’d be at this all day. And it would further encourage bad behavior because any engagement is good engagement right?: If you can pull someone into a quagmire of discussion then ragebait comments and posts would be the order of the day.

    To me this is not… A healthy way to interact with forums. You don’t have to engage with every post or comment you come across, be it with commenting or voting. You’re “allowed” to be neutral, to not know, to not have an opinion, or to simply not want to engage.

    And if you feel that someone is pulling you into a pointless argument, you can just walk away. Having the last word != being right, as a lot of people misunderstand.

    And if people posting ragebaits becomes an issue, downvoting or replying to them won’t solve anything. The problem would need to be fixed on a more fundamental level, but that’s another can of worms that mods need to figure out on their own communities. As for me, I simply walked away, as I did with Reddit and others



  • irate944@piefed.socialtoMemes@sopuli.xyzYou earned some more dislikes
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    11 days ago

    I wish lemmy and piefed didn’t use downvotes. Just upvotes buttons.

    But even then, an ideal forum imo would be one without any of that stuff. Like 4chan, except without the trash community that they have

    Edit: Case in point, as soon I posted this comment, it got downvoted. Instead of having people engage and explain their points of view, maybe even have an interesting discussion about it, downvote buttons serve as an immediate “disagree” button. It’s a design that dicentivizes discussion


  • My company forced us to use only Chrome on our PC’s and one of the things I was worried about was the ads. I put youtube in the background while I work.

    And I was surprised by how… My experience was exactly the same as Firefox and Brave. Ok, actually, one or two ads managed to slip through and appeared in the front page - albeit rarely and randomly - but I never got those ads at the beginning of the video. On other websites, I never got ads.

    I was wondering, then, if there was some catch. Maybe the trackers would still get through or something. But according to that link, not even that? lol


  • I would love to read an independent study on this, but this is from Anthropic (the guys that make Claude) so it’s definitely biased.

    Speaking for myself, I’ve been using LLM’s to help out with jumps in small gaps of knowledge. Like for example, I know what I need to do, I just don’t know/remember the specific functions or libraries that I need to do that in Python. LLM is extremely useful for these moments; and it’s faster than searching and asking on forums. And to be transparent, I did learn a few tricks here and there.

    But if someone lets the LLM do most of the work - like vibe coders - I doubt they will learn anything.