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43 results for “gollyhatch”
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While contributing a little to #OpenStreetMap today (which you have to create an account for) I kept seeing edits from another user in my area, making me guess that they probably gotta live in the same hood as me. That made me wonder if you could use #OSM contributions for #OSINT, in particular for #geolocating contributors.
And yes, of course you can!
OSM states in their #privacy policy that email addresses are never ("intentionally") published, however your user name is public and searchable. So I gave it a little test, I picked a random OSM contributor and based on how their edits are clustered on the map I could make a reasonable guess about the neighborhood they likely live in, see screenshot below. Searching their user name on the web I could quickly identify other accounts on Github and social media, as well their OSM contributions, meaning this works in both directions.
So, while obviously I don't want to discourage anyone from contributing to OSM, I do recommend using a user name that's not easily linkable to your accounts on other websites as well as a unique email address, as you never know if there'll be a leak someday.
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Jedenfalls nutze ich das System seitdem auch nicht mehr - und als #localguide bin ich auch gestorben.
#Google sucks.
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so, I replaced #pocket with #sefhosted #readeck
While importing the pocket entries, I noticed about 2/3 dead links. Nice.
this script was of great assistance to me:
https://codeberg.org/gollyhatch/readeck-cleanupYMMV
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For reference: nudist chases wild boars that stole his notebook at a Berlin nudist beach.
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For reference: nudist chases wild boars that stole his notebook at a Berlin nudist beach.
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For reference: nudist chases wild boars that stole his notebook at a Berlin nudist beach.
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For reference: nudist chases wild boars that stole his notebook at a Berlin nudist beach.
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For reference: nudist chases wild boars that stole his notebook at a Berlin nudist beach.
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I mean sure it looks cool but why spend so much on robots when Berlin nudists chase wild boars for free. 🤔
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I mean sure it looks cool but why spend so much on robots when Berlin nudists chase wild boars for free. 🤔
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I mean sure it looks cool but why spend so much on robots when Berlin nudists chase wild boars for free. 🤔
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I mean sure it looks cool but why spend so much on robots when Berlin nudists chase wild boars for free. 🤔
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I mean sure it looks cool but why spend so much on robots when Berlin nudists chase wild boars for free. 🤔
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CW: Prostitution, NSFW terms, police
I just watched a ride-along police documentary series where a camera team follows a couple of cops around during their night shift in Hamburg, and, even though I know prostitution is legal in Germany, I find it quite fascinating how socially accepted and normalized it seems, at least in the red light district there. So much so that sex work customers who feel ripped off (as in they paid upfront but didn't receive the agreed on service or only parts of it) go to the cops and file a complaint, no sign of embarrassment whatsoever, and the cops then have to go to some brothel and try to sort it out, like "Uhm yeah so this guy said he paid for a blowjob and anal but only got the BJ, so, uhm, well, are you gonna give the anal money back or, err, are you gonna, uh, you know…"
EDIT: Another curious thing is that sex workers obviously don't use their real names, however they're registered so cops first gotta go to the brothel management and ask something like "We got a complaint, is there a person working here that goes by the name 'Sharona Thundercunt Fistybang Queen of Cocks' and where's her room?", in their most professional cop voice of course.
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CW: Prostitution, NSFW terms, police
I just watched a ride-along police documentary series where a camera team follows a couple of cops around during their night shift in Hamburg, and, even though I know prostitution is legal in Germany, I find it quite fascinating how socially accepted and normalized it seems, at least in the red light district there. So much so that sex work customers who feel ripped off (as in they paid upfront but didn't receive the agreed on service or only parts of it) go to the cops and file a complaint, no sign of embarrassment whatsoever, and the cops then have to go to some brothel and try to sort it out, like "Uhm yeah so this guy said he paid for a blowjob and anal but only got the BJ, so, uhm, well, are you gonna give the anal money back or, err, are you gonna, uh, you know…"
EDIT: Another curious thing is that sex workers obviously don't use their real names, however they're registered so cops first gotta go to the brothel management and ask something like "We got a complaint, is there a person working here that goes by the name 'Sharona Thundercunt Fistybang Queen of Cocks' and where's her room?", in their most professional cop voice of course.
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Yesterday I wrote a little note-taking tool based on #fzf and #ripgrep for myself and I'm quite happy with it so I thought I'd push it to #codeberg to share it with others but I really wanted to include a little GIF in the README showing it in action to demonstrate how it works, but when converting my screencap video to a GIF, no matter what I do, it's played back at like 25% of the original speed in #Firefox. And that's when I realized that all the people including GIFs of their CLI tools in their GitHub/Codeberg READMEs likely aren't annoyingly slow typers after all, it's the f*cking browser. 😒
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Yesterday I wrote a little note-taking tool based on #fzf and #ripgrep for myself and I'm quite happy with it so I thought I'd push it to #codeberg to share it with others but I really wanted to include a little GIF in the README showing it in action to demonstrate how it works, but when converting my screencap video to a GIF, no matter what I do, it's played back at like 25% of the original speed in #Firefox. And that's when I realized that all the people including GIFs of their CLI tools in their GitHub/Codeberg READMEs likely aren't annoyingly slow typers after all, it's the f*cking browser. 😒
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Yesterday I wrote a little note-taking tool based on #fzf and #ripgrep for myself and I'm quite happy with it so I thought I'd push it to #codeberg to share it with others but I really wanted to include a little GIF in the README showing it in action to demonstrate how it works, but when converting my screencap video to a GIF, no matter what I do, it's played back at like 25% of the original speed in #Firefox. And that's when I realized that all the people including GIFs of their CLI tools in their GitHub/Codeberg READMEs likely aren't annoyingly slow typers after all, it's the f*cking browser. 😒
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So if you want to self-host Standard Notes (which is open source) you have to pay $39/year for a "self-hosting license" to get a few additional themes? 🤨 Who came up with this business model?
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So if you want to self-host Standard Notes (which is open source) you have to pay $39/year for a "self-hosting license" to get a few additional themes? 🤨 Who came up with this business model?
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So if you want to self-host Standard Notes (which is open source) you have to pay $39/year for a "self-hosting license" to get a few additional themes? 🤨 Who came up with this business model?
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Still not looking pretty but I can already fetch articles from @readeck and actually read them, which is about 90% of the functionality I'd expect/need. I should've spent more time on adding functionality I guess but instead wasted hours trying to make that material deaign thingy generate a color scheme that doesn't suck, and it's still not exactly great. Oh well.
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I'm once again looking for a read-it-later/article archive tool. I think I've tried them all by now and I'm amazed that for such a basic task there's no good solution. I think my demands are very reasonable:
– article content extraction (not just bookmarks) and comfortable reader
– full text search over the entire archive
– website and Android app with synchronization between them
– not a whole lot of random unrelated features like todo lists or whatever thrown in for no reasonI was using Pocket for many years and even paid for the "premium" (which basically got me a few extra fonts because the "premium" features like tag suggestions didn't work), however Pocket got worse and worse at article extraction, to the point where it just opened to website instead of showing the extracted text for more than half of the saved articles. Also no one seems to actively work on it it seems. Pretty much the same problems with Instapaper. I tried Feedly and Inoreader which kinda works I guess but they're primarily RSS readers, which I don't need. raindrop.io does extract article texts but shows them only in the Android app, in a browser it'll still open the website, also the full text search doesn't work reliability. Then there's Wallabag but that seems very Alpha and I don't want to host the service myself. Tried a bunch more which I can't remember right now.
As a temporary solution I'm now saving articles to @notesnook since I'm using that for notes anyway. Article extraction works alright but there's no way to archive notes, so it's all cluttered with articles now and I can barely find my own notes anymore.
If anyone knows of a tool that reliably does all the things mentioned above, please let me know!
#readitlater #readability #pocket #feedly #inoreader #instapaper #raindropio
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OK maybe I'm seeing things, but I'm 100% sure when I asked ChatGPT to geolocate an image last night it said something like "based on your location in Glasgow" when it was making some guesses. I wasn't in Glasgow and I knew for a fact that the photo was taken in the USA, but then noticed my VPN was on and had an exit node in Glasgow. I didn't think much of it, told it to ignore my own location and continued. When I remembered that today I thought well that's kinda bad, taking the user's IP location into account when asked to geolocate a random photo. I tried to replicate the session, planning to switch to exit nodes in different countries and see if that changes the results. However I got completely different results than last night and also when asked directly, ChatGPT insisted that it can't see my IP nor my GeoIP location. No idea what happened there and since it was a temporary session I don't have the history of last night, but if indeed your own location (as perceived by ChatGPT) plays into its efforts to geolocate images, that's something one should keep in mind when using ChatGPT for OSINT.
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I'm looking for a #Rust #crate for what I think should be a very common task, but somehow I can't find anything. Basically what I'd like to have is a `verbose!()` macro and maybe a `debug!()` one too that just wrap around `println!()` but stay quiet unless I set the output level to verbose or debug, for example based on --verbose or --debug command line flags. All the usual logging crates are complete overkill, also my output doesn't have different urgency levels like info, warn, etc., I just want to let the user choose how much spam they want to see. Is there anything like that?
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Danny Joe Brown lead singer of Molly Hatchet was born 24th August 1951, today would have been his 74th birthday
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#ListeningTo #MollyHatchet – Boogie No More (on "Flirtin' with Disaster") https://y.com.sb/watch?v=H36aL8u7eX0 #Ungh! #EpicJE36110 #USofA #1979 #Rock #SouthernRock
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#ListeningTo #MollyHatchet – Boogie No More (on "Flirtin' with Disaster") https://y.com.sb/watch?v=H36aL8u7eX0 #Ungh! #EpicJE36110 #USofA #1979 #Rock #SouthernRock