@matt This provoked some writing, and it turns out I had at least a few things to say about patterns in Rust's governance: https://graydon2.dreamwidth.org/307105.html
@tess it was a very weird world.
The admins would step in if you filled up the disk, but not for almost anything you would _say_. Until spam.
Were you on Usenet back in the day?
The idea that Jack was the first person with free speech as a banner seems odd to me.
(Of course, this was ultimately fake on Usenet, much as it is on Twitter.)
In this case, none of this process was followed. To the best of my understanding, this is what happened:
1. Valve legal contacted Nintendo of America to ask "hey, what do you think about Dolphin?"
2. Nintendo replied to Valve "we think it's bad and also that it violates the DMCA anti-circumvention provisions" (note: nothing about violating copyright itself). Also "please take it down".
3. Valve legal takes it down and forwards NoA's reply to the Dolphin Foundation contact address.
nintendo's really having a blast telling everyone to pirate their games! so far in the past couple of months, nintendo has:
- shut down the eshop for wii u/3ds
- issued a DMCA to lockpickRCM, preventing switch owners from legally obtaining keys needed for emulation (and it caused a switch emulator to shut down due to fears they'd be DMCA'd too)
- sent a new 3DS update that blocked all free methods of homebrewing the console
- and just recently, they told steam to take down the dolphin emulator
remember: pirating nintendo games is good.
(edit: fix'd some info!)
"The hot news that nobody sane has been waiting for"--the Windows XP activation algorithm has been solved, meaning anyone can generate an authentic XP activation code. (I find it's a wonderful "sweet spot" resource for VMs, old enough to run most '90s apps and new enough for the GPU support to do it well.) https://www.theregister.com/2023/05/26/windows_xp_activation_cracked/
> I'd thought HN leaned consistently less liberal.
Why did you think that?
Vanilla liberalism seems to be the most common among the tech crowd (though quieter than exotic political stances.)
3DS
literally the only correct update Nintendo could've released for the 3DS was one which opened up the firmware at least a little more, and/or removed restrictions to playing games (I'm almost sure that there are still cross-region restrictions, and so removing them would be the correct option)
When a device is past its end of its lifecycle like that you don't lock it down more, you give people the tools to still re-use it
You're just making more E-waste otherwise
Literal Jesus fucking Christ
Nintendo: 3DS store closed, no more digital only games :)
Users: Well at least we can still mod our consoles, it's not like anyone is losing money, since we literally cannot buy these games anymo-
Nintendo: :)))
https://nintendoeverything.com/3ds-update-out-now-version-11-17-0-50-patch-notes/
The #curl graph we always get to debate over. Number of *C mistakes* vs *non-C mistakes* among the existing 145 reported vulnerabilities. Updated with the latest 4 reports, and the LOC graph added as a comparison.
@niplav oh man. Somebody should tell him.