host it on my website
That’s distributing and barred under the other license item. Sorry to burst your bubble.
It’s a convenience over privacy thing. If the api is discord compatible you lose the e2e on that channel / server, or make the api e2e but then existing bots need modifying
I could see this being a toggle
GitHub has a “clone” button, if you click on that you can get git links to download the code. The http-URL doesn’t require authentication.
Edit: I misread the comment that it’s about a different app.
Imagine being an author whose sole income is writing books.
Here comes an AI that stole indexed your work and is asked by a customer of OpenAI to summarise your books. It does so perfectly and the issuer is able to use your results freely, since they think it’s AI generated and doesn’t require attribution.
You receive nothing in return.
Good luck making a living.
Edit: stole to indexed, added edit note
How dare you speak for other nations like that.
Sounds like they’re lacking some essential American Freedom™!
Come to think of it, sounds like you’re acting very Red™ yourself.
(/s, if you missed it)
Hey, they gave some people an Uber Eats coupon
You’ve never used HDMI?
I’ve been doing this yesterday. Not because Git broke, but since Intellij kept pulling invalid configs from the cache, and that was based on some kind of path identifier it seemed.
There’s half a dozens of us!
A year lasts longer
Rinsing your dishes before putting them in the dishwasher is actually a good idea if the dishes are very dirty though…
Don’t flush kitchen tissue though, it doesn’t disintegrate as toiletpaper does.
They might be printed on there, but as long as it looks like it has wifi (pointy units or the wifi symbol on your phone), people will buy it.
802.11 isn’t anywhere near common knowledge. That’s why it was named WiFi and trademarked to begin with.
Even worse, the CVE is effectively “if you use the package wrong, you get weird results”.
The affected method has signature function isPrivate(ip: string): boolean
. Passing in a hex number is not a string, and a method (toString
) exists for this.
Hey, don’t embereress them for bad spellling! That’s not naice
The former, unfortunately.
For DNS and DDoS protection that wouldn’t directly be an issue.
For caching it would be breaking. You cannot cache what you cannot read (encrypted traffic can only be cached by the decrypting party).
You don’t have to be PCI compliant for stuff like bank transfers or other forms of payment. Credit cards aren’t the default payment method everywhere.
Maybe it’s pay on pickup, or just a simple mail with sepa wire transfer instructions.
Also, the PSP can still use JS but your site still doesn’t need to have it. Services like Mollie and Stripe offer checkout environments they host, meaning you still don’t have to use JS on your site.
I’m actively trying to avoid it, but even in The Netherlands it’s hard to avoid the talk of the town.