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213
Joined
2 yr. ago

(They/Any)

My name is Dee, I hope you like me, if you don't the block button is free.

  • Oh I agree, I don't think he should've been dropped especially since they're not showing the photos they took meaning it's likely not that bad. I was more so just referring to the use of drone tech for this type of inspection. I think that's fine, as long as they're giving proper notification like what's required with human inspectors.

  • Absolutely agree, I don't think they should be able to pull out like they did here. I could possibly see it if it was an extreme case of hoarding with an open flame and tons of flammable material or something like that, but there's nothing to suggest that's the case so the insurance company is in the wrong still. I was more referring to the use of the drone tech itself since this is the tech community.

  • Yeah, when Digg did the dumb thing all those years ago Reddit didn't start eclipsing it for another two or three years. This feels very similar to that time tbh. Lemmy will get there, but I imagine it'll take longer due to its fragmented nature scaring some non-techies so I'd guess four years and we'll see numbers to rival Reddit. If you care about that, I kind of like the smaller communities, honestly.

    Too bad there's not a RemindMe Bot on Lemmy yet, this would be perfect for that lol

  • I get it, my sister got bugs in her home before from a hoarder neighbor and I've known somebody who had to move due to a fire caused by a different hoarder so I understand why they'd want/need to do this. But I feel like this falls under the inspection notification laws, at least my state has it where they need to inform you 24 hours before any inspection. So they should've sent out a notification 24 hours before flying the drone over and it would've been fine IMO. I'm not saying this guy was a hoarder either though, the insurance company wouldn't release their photos so we can't say if that's actually the case one way or the other. But I'm fine with them using drones tbh.

  • I'm not sure why this three-year-old post is showing up now, but uh, if there are subreddits you still want to use after migrating to Lemmy you can set them up as an RSS feed. It's so much better and you don't give their site additional engagement or clicks. You can even click the article link from your RSS reader without ever having to go to Reddit. The only subreddit I still use is for my local metroplex/city, since there's not enough of my neighbors on the Fediverse yet. But now I can see every post as it comes in so I can keep up to date with what's going on with where I live and find out about deals and sales.

    You just take the URL for the subreddit and add ".rss" to the end and that's it.

    Example: "https://www.reddit.com/r/SubredditName.rss"

  • See Mozingo? Nothin'

    (this comment makes more sense if you can see both lemmy.world and beehaw comments lol)

  • Well that's pretty fun. Thanks for sharing.

  • I want Star Citizen... The Star Citizen that was promised in the Kickstarter... Still waiting.

  • Cat mode.

    Could you elaborate on this? lol

  • I'm pretty sure the games are still there but in HTML5 now, I remember logging in again a couple of years back and they were there at least.

  • I don't mind too much, I didn't know TorGuard was blocking that traffic or logging American users but now I do. So I appreciate the article in that regard but the post should've been titled like "Reminder that TorGuard tracks American users" or something rather than being presented as new info imo.

  • Exactly, it's really easy to access a lot of the streams. There's little to zero technical knowledge needed so this law will likely be very effective against most viewers as much as that sucks.

  • Yes, correct. I'm not sure why you tried posting that as some sort of gotcha. It's much easier for a person to have accessed one of these streams than to change DNS and put on a VPN. While that is very easy for us and people in our circles, I think you're severely overestimating the technical prowess of the general population.

  • it will probably exclude a lot of people from access

    Majority of the population I'd wager tbh, most of the general public is not tech-savvy enough to get around this.

  • Yeah, I'm confused why they're saying that? Their Github is right here and you can setup your own instance with bridges just like you have.

  • Same, I've been changing "guys" to "folks" and "man" to "fam".

    Because "come on man" has been used for so long that one has been harder. Using fam feels a little out of place for my millennial self but I think Gen Z found a great replacer with "come on fam" and I can get behind that.

  • Oh hey, it's my day.

    I'm non-binary and just keep it as that. I know it's an umbrella term that has many (MANY) further subcategories that can be explored but I never felt it was necessary for me. I just know that I'm somewhere between man and woman and feel euphoria from being androgynous. Honestly, whenever I hear the definition of Twin Spirit that sounds really accurate to how I feel inside, but seeing as I'm profusely white it seems wrong to use that label. So, just non-binary for me.

    And that's okay.

  • I use bisexual everywhere and with everyone. I like the bisexual flag more and I like the juxtaposition of it next to enby. So I'm a non-binary bisexual. Alliteration is fun.

    I guess you could argue that's not alliteration because they're using the same root of "bi" but I still like the sound of it.