The steam deck is hands down the most interesting piece of tech (outside of modern smart phones). It's wild I've been able to get Fallout 3 mods working in the crazy windows proton boot shells that just magically worked.
History became legend.
Legend became myth.
And for two and a half thousand years, Foul Bachelor Frog passed out of all knowledge.
I think it's because when it is illegal it's ultra illegal and ultra terrible. Even then I question how much of it is already pretty sus.
To be fair, platforms like this will originate in that shape for the significant future. Reddit did as well. I'm not white, but work as a software engineer.
For shako being the rarest item in the game, it's so utterly boring.
Let go of that thought. Reddit is (probably) here to stay. Lemmy will have less users, less communities, and tbh, probably less quality content. That's okay. Grow your seeds.
I graduated at 27 and got an internship in SF. Life changed.
We might have to accept we're on the "losing" side, e.g. Lemmy will never have the numbers our subreddits had. We'll have smaller communities and less content, but hopefully better conversation.
Ah, in less than 48 hours we've come full circle.
What beautiful dawns await us.
Across the Spiderverse for $7 is money well, well spent.
I'm in! Unless rif goes to lif, in which case cheers all around :)
The great thing is, now you're 100% empowered to move forward and host the responsibility yourself. Demanding volunteers shoulder potential liability (when you yourself admit you can't understand how there's any in the first place) is juvenile.
The moment a volunteer is hit with a DMCA notice or any threat of legal action, you think they have any interest in going through the court system? You can do it first.