

If a state-actor doxxing you is in your threat model, using any social media should be verboten - even under a pseudonym.


If a state-actor doxxing you is in your threat model, using any social media should be verboten - even under a pseudonym.


In situations like this, the answer isn’t to argue over the interpretation of the words: it’s to fix the words.
If the writers intended “no excessive capitalization or excessive grammatical errors”, then it should be changed to that.
If the writers intended “no excessive capitalization and no grammatical errors”, then it should be changed to that.
Both situations remove the ambiguity and prevent pedantic internet arguments about language interpretation.
Pfff, all these amateurs here using Vim. Y’all should use Emacs. You still have all of these problems, but you get to act all superior about it. /s (except for the superiority complex; that’s real)


I use uMatrix (uBlock’s big brother), so sites that do this generally lose first-party JS privileges real fast.
I read a decent rebuttal to the “paradox” of tolerance. To summarize for those that don’t know, the idea is that tolerance is a social contract. You tolerate everyone that’s behaving according to the contract. Refusing to tolerate someone that has broken the contract isn’t a violation of the contract; it’s required in order to enforce the contract.
You break the rules, you lose the protections. Simple as.
I wouldn’t be surprised if all shells have some form of that, but not enabled by default. I know Bash does, but I’ve never turned it on.