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Posts
10
Comments
33
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • Or if you don't want to give reddit any traffic, here's a couple more you can check:

    yaps.cc

    movie-web.app

  • Always has been. Love your crew ;)

  • The ability to direct-message others without matching.

    So basically your privacy only goes as far as how much other people are willing to pay

  • Forget about them, white torture will do the whole trick

  • A couple years ago you could replace that with Apple (except for the ads part i think), does that still apply or has apple seen any kind of redemption?

  • Can't talk for everyone, but for the case of rplace, I'd say propaganda.

    I know of people who still use reddit as they always do, and its likely because they don't know reddit's latest (and terrible) corporate decisions, so using rplace to spread a message that tells people something is wrong with reddit is the first step for these people to find the right path: leaving reddit.

  • This is starting to get like Earth Inc.

  • How do I say r/antimeme here?

  • “fuck u/spez” means absolutely nothing to anyone who isn’t familiar with Reddit, it’s just noise.

    And "Fire Steve Huffman means absolutely nothing to anyone who doesn't know reddit CEO's name.

    I'll go for an easier one: Fuck reddit, join lemmy. Easy and clear, and I'm not sure reddit would get any better with its CEO fired, they'll likely find someone similar.

  • Many people don't know who spez (or Steve Huffman for that matter) is, a more general text should work: Fuck Reddit.

    I'm actually surprised the fuck spez messages have lasted long since admins probably have access to brushes to clear it up like it was paint.

  • I'm probably an ignorant paranoid about them, I know I should google a bit of them, but instead I'm going for the ol' trusty ask the community.

    Do they save your passwords locally or in the cloud? If locally, what if I want to sign in in another device? What if I lose the device I have my passwords on? What if they hack my device? If in the cloud: How can I know the service is not stealing my information? If I can access it anywhere, wouldn't that mean it also needs a password? Wouldn't that make it twice as unsafe as it would only take one password to access the rest?

    Edit: Damn, I got extremely useful answers, I'm starting to like lemmy!

  • I mean, do people actually use the search feature for anything besides looking for files IN your system?