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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)T
Posts
5
Comments
546
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • And people who have a particular interest in that culture would be termed... Saxophiles.

  • The Internet has ruined me because I can't read the word "watersports" without thinking of the fetish anymore.

  • Makes sense, it's a lose-lose. No matter which way you go with the story (or the gameplay, for that matter), it's gonna piss a lot of people off because it doesn't meet their ridiculous expectations.

    Some sequels just aren't meant to be. Better off remaining vaporware than ending up some disappointing, soulless cash grab.

  • A little flag pops out that says "bang!"

  • When you cargo install a binary, it ignores lockfiles. If you clone a project and build it, it respects the Cargo.lock that was checked in.

  • It's not enforced though, and there's no way as a consumer to see how a crate was published.

    To be extremely fair, crates.io has a huge maintenance bottleneck because AFAIK it doesn't even have a single dedicated developer. But that's definitely a big part of the problem.

    The Rust Foundation is really just not pulling in enough revenue to support the project properly. They really ought to figure out more revenue streams than just sponsorships and donations.

  • You can't overwrite previously published versions.

    Application projects are recommended to check-in the Cargo.lock which pins dependency versions but you can always just run cargo update at any time which automatically upgrades all dependencies to the newest version allowed by the Cargo.toml.

    Some projects get around this by pinning the dependency in the Cargo.toml (using =) or by vendoring all their dependencies, which is a huge pain in the ass.

  • Interestingly, developers in ecosystems like Go, Rust, and those utilizing native Web APIs—where robust standard libraries drastically reduce reliance on third-party code and strict cryptographic verification is built into the core toolchain—reported zero instances of a college dropout’s weekend project wiping out global logistics infrastructure today.

    As someone who's built a career in Rust, it is 100% susceptible to an attack like this. The community is just generally paranoid enough to avoid depending on super niche packages.

    Even so, Cargo still doesn't have code signing and crates.io doesn't have 2FA. They just barely rolled out email alerts for new crates being published with your API key.

    And there's dozens of single-author crates that are depended upon by millions of lines of code, any one of which could easily be a vector in a supply chain attack. In fact there have been attempted supply chain attacks against crates.io, but to my knowledge they've all relied on typo-squatting.

    We're definitely overdue for a major attack.

  • "Why don't we just skip the middleman and I fuck you instead?"

  • What happens when the baby turns to red mist? Is that just "part of God's plan"?

  • This is something we lost when game developers stopped publishing free demos. I cannot imagine how "just buy it and refund it if you don't like it" is somehow better for the industry.

  • Guilty

    Jump
  • Freddie had power bottom energy tho

  • Guilty

    Jump
  • That song was actually written by guitarist Brian May.

    So this dude:

    Is the real ass-man of Queen.

  • "The exploit is coming from inside the house!"

  • I started growing my hair out unintentionally, I just stopped getting it cut during the pandemic.

    I've found a hair wrapped around my balls more than once. Those fucking things love to go spelunking, man.

  • The Internet gives us access to the kind of depths of human depravity on a daily basis that most people wouldn't have been exposed to in 1968, unless they had just gotten back from Vietnam.

  • Case in point: Fox News

  • Deleted

    Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • Which it has not successfully done so since 1934.

  • Programmer Humor @programming.dev

    Another meme inspired me to make this

  • 196 @lemmy.blahaj.zone

    As rule as it gets

  • 196 @lemmy.blahaj.zone

    (OC) sour cream rule

  • Ask Lemmy @lemmy.world

    Has anyone else gotten emails out of the blue from random members of Congress that sound like replies to something you sent in?

  • Memes @lemmy.ml

    Meta AI supports spooky dookies