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U.S. population pyramid graph is sobering enough.

The only real way to opt out is to not use 'the product'.

I miss the days where 'the product' is only what we got, and not being the victim of an executives stalking campaign.


First time I saw the lesser case version of dickover I thought it said clickover.

"The star that burns twice as bright lasts half as long, Roy."

Mod Pizza does or did offer a Gluten free crust made from cauliflower. Had a distinctive taste to it, it tasted good.


I really like the Open Nature (Safeway/Von's store brand) cauliflower crust. No one believes me because it's a store brand but I've actually hooked some people on those that don't have any gluten restrictions. I haven't found a branded one that's better.


They never went away, just from your mind. Look at cheap xfinity wifi hotspots everywhere that still steal your credentials in the form of phone number and email address. The bar I went to last night has a free wifi hotspot like every establishment ever.

Misinformation smells like your own farts, disgusting to everyone but you.


But unfortunately, a VPN won't protect you from captive portals. So not entirely sure what your comment adds to the discussion other than being unnecessarily rude.

For other readers who may be too young to remember, improper privacy controls (unenforced HTTPS, poor encryption in the form of WEP, easy MitM attacks, etc) meant that public/untrusted WiFi was a legitimate security risk as things like passwords, bank details, etc were very easy to steal as they were sent unencrypted over the air. This is fortunately much less true these days with the advent of better protections across the entire stack (HTTPS everywhere, WPA*, etc) but unscrupulous VPN merchants still use this outdated argument to try to sell their products to less technically-savvy customers.

What these technologies (and VPNs) _do not_ prevent is the legitimate (and consensual) capture of user data by captive portal software (email, phone, etc), which is typically submitted by a user wishing to connect to a public network. This is what the parent comment is mentioning. Different risk profiles, obviously.


Yeah the being asked for an email or phone for free wifi option is completely different from the “I can MITM all your web requests” which is what needs a VPN.

I usually give a fake email or phone number to get free wifi anyway.


Fuck@off.com tends to work but I’ve sometimes had portals give refuse that as a “fake”, same with bob@bob.com. Billg@microsoft.com is my fallback.


me@here.com usually works. No need to be silly.


If the captive portal for an open network uses HTTP, then anyone nearby can see the information you submit.


The hotspots themselves may be iffy but almost everything uses https these days.


Instead of a line by line command copypaste, they really could have used a single post where users can just copy the commands and paste the set to terminal.


This is better so you think about the commands that you're pasting into your terminal before you do it, rather than just one blob of who-knows-what.

However, what I don't understand is why there isn't just a single Dockerfile that does it all. `docker build` is step 4 or something.


You're really not alone in this. Nature exposure has helped a lot since the industrial revolution as far as any mental health concerns go. A return to the old world, full of trees and brush is still there for all of us.

This is what people mean by 'Go touch grass'. They're not being literal but it's a few simple words that just say go experience primitive roots for a few hours and come back to the artificial world we've created for ourselves.

I used to reject the particular notion until I went outside and depending on where you live, you might experience verbally hostile people if you're alone. Which goes to show there are others feeling far worse if they're being verbally hostile to random people.

The more I read HN symptoms the more I point to trees.


People said the same thing in 1800s on the eastern seaboard they even built cute little rail lines.


Some hobbies are more fun than others.


>sees any random article headline, automatically assumes it's AI.


Pretty reasonable assumption these days unfortunately.


Just saying things with no evidence is not reasonable


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