Want to piss off your IT department? Are the links not malicious looking enough?
phishyurl.com
Rules for creating good-looking user interfaces, from a developer
weberdominik.com
Count Folke Bernadotte: Sweden's Servant of Peace (2010)
historytoday.com
Playing “Minecraft” without Minecraft (2024)
lenowo.org
The Sagrada Família takes its final shape
newyorker.com
U.S. already has the critical minerals it needs, according to new analysis
minesnewsroom.com
Tracking trust with Rust in the kernel
lwn.net
This map is not upside down
maps.com
AI tools are making the world look weird
strat7.com
Llama-Factory: Unified, Efficient Fine-Tuning for 100 Open LLMs
github.com
Grief gets an expiration date, just like us
bessstillman.substack.com
Learn Your Way: Reimagining Textbooks with Generative AI
research.google
The Rise and Fall of the British Detective Novel (2010)
historytoday.com
Slack has raised our charges by $195k per year
skyfall.dev
Sylvia Plath's fig tree meets machine learning
dontlognow.substack.com
Show HN: Asxiv.org – Ask ArXiv papers questions through chat
asxiv.org
Rupert's snub cube and other Math Holes
tom7.org
I like the idea of nostr but when I tried to use it it was a lot of CP which made me instantly stop using it. I guess the issue with this type of protocols is that there must be a way to prevent these very dark and illegal content.
As a user I don't want to see it and the submitter should be found and jailed for distributing it. Right now, it's hard to know where it even comes from since it can come from any of the relay you are connected to. Most apps do not show which relay the content originates from and honestly, what can you do?
I guess one solution is to only use paid relayes or heavily restricted ones that require invitation. But if that is the case, it kind of defeats the purpose of Nostr to begin with IMO.