techno156
Can't you chuck it back into a reactor and reuse it that way, to help reduce the radioactivity, and get more power back out of it?
Slight shame that the contractors didn't start from the end. It could have been funnier if they had taken off the "er" instead.
Or shut them down, given the recent debacle with Amazon shutting down someone's account, disabling their devices in the process.
Kbin has a report function, although I don't know if reports Federate. They might not.
Lemmy does do reporting, although it's not clear whether it's just moderators, or whether the admins will also receive them.
no headphone jack means you may need to purchase wireless headphones or earbuds and wireless earbuds don’t always have replaceable batteries
They're also more expensive, even if fairphone does offer their own headphones.
A cheap set of decent wired earphones is $10. $30 if you want something nice, like an IEM.
Bluetooth headphones don't tend to be quite as cheap, and are usually a good deal more.
Although you can't both charge the phone/use pripherals, like a keyboard/mouse and use headphones in that case, unless you're using one of the few phones with 2+ USB-C ports, and wireless charging can be cumbersome.
Especially since doing that will let you Federate through compromised comments, and possibly affect other instances using the Federation network, unless they're updated.
Yes. They got hacked. An admin account got compromised, and the hackers exploited a bug in Lemmy-UI (the web site) that let them do things like redirect users to another site that let them run Javscript. It seems to have let them collect some user tokens from accounts, and access an admin account that way.
Others did get hacked, or are vulnerable to it, but aren't big enough targets?
Beehaw is closed, so they would have had to have an existing account to exploit the same bug (or go through something like Kbin), and Lemmy.world is the biggest Lemmy instance.
And if they could do that, someone else could use the same trick to do worse things, since they're just running bare JavaScript.