

And some were not even translated at all.
Really smart move from the manga industry.
What are they even trying to achieve here?
It’s not like there isn’t a bunch of other websites hosting the same stuff…
And some were not even translated at all.
Really smart move from the manga industry.
What are they even trying to achieve here?
It’s not like there isn’t a bunch of other websites hosting the same stuff…
Oh, great. The best part is that for some of these publishers there’s literally no legal way to read their manga online.
Unless you think Japan and USA are the only 2 countries in the world, I guess…
You should check the source OP posted before making an ass of yourself.
That’s what this answer actually suggests, but apparently typing “journalctl” is tedious, so let’s instead break everything for no good reason and blame systemd.
Man, deep packet inspection is some crazy stuff.
Good implementation can identify the type of traffic within seconds with scarily good accuracy.
Quite a few countries actually implement this in their national ISP’s infrastructure to block VPNs, so the citizens can’t access non-approved websites.
It wouldn’t.
USA tried to keep the encryption all to itself in the past by classifying it as munitions, it didn’t work out.
And criminals don’t care if encryption is banned anyway.
Thank you for being one person in this thread that actually read and understood my comment.
A bunch of comments repeating “Signal is the most secure because I said so” was not helpful.
Sure, buddy.
Maybe you should read the comments you’re replying to first.
If you can’t do that much then maybe you just shouldn’t comment at all.
I’ll simplify it for you:
Discussion quality on Lemmy starts looking like Reddit now.
Almost feels like home…
OK, and how is that different from the other chats?
You do know that at least Signal and Matrix use pretty much the same crypto, right?
And Matrix can be self-hosted, so I don’t need to worry about what they can see anyway.
On this point alone Matrix appears more secure than Signal…
And Threema is Switzerland-based, so by default it’s more trustful than a USA-based company.
Signal is the most secure
[citation needed]
the alternative is around the same price
You know that’s not true.
There are stupidly expensive Android flagships, but there are also a lot of phones for a fraction of the price.
It’d be funny if the other companies caught in the crossfire now sued those LaLiga assholes for blocking their services.
How about both?
I’d expect the design to take into account this kind of issue, they’re only one of the most valuable companies in the world, surely they can afford some QA.
Until the GPU cooks itself anyway, because nvidia can’t admit their new power connector was a mistake.
I was in a similar situation, I just told them I’m cancelling the account when they added the extra charge for extra users, and they’re free to make their own account if they want.
There was a bit of complaining, but it turns out no one missed Netflix enough to come back.
I mean… when did it stop being huge?
It’s just back to business as usual.
Holy shit, this company is based in France and they’re publicly doxxing their users in the replies.
I don’t even know what to say, under GDPR they’re extra fucked now.
I never really compared the source to the converted mobi, but overall I can’t really complain.
Usually if the formatting is a little screwed up I assume it’s the source’s fault. :)
Almost every book I read nowadays is an epub converted to mobi.
Honestly, the bigger issue I have is the inability to put the sideloaded books into a series “folder”.
Instead I had to set Calibre to add “<series> <number> <book title>” string to the book tile in the metadata. :/
Pretty well written post.
On Kindle and epub: it’s pretty annoying, but once you set up Calibre to automatically convert on sending to device, it’s effortless.
And they claim “zero vendor lock-in”.
Exporting your content from whatever weird format they’re using in the DB isn’t exactly making the switch easy.