My colleagues having a chat about their favourite tv shows in the operations channel at 7am have entered the chat.
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I know, but those techniques are more likely to cause selection weirdness than flexbox/etc, which is why I mention them specifically.
On mobile: multiple top and bottom tool/nav bars that automatically show/hide themselves when you scroll. They’re invariably more irritating than if they were just pinned at the top of the page (or perhaps viewport, but ideally page - I can scroll to the top of I want it back)
On desktop: animations tied to scrolling.
Anywhere: any kind of popup, modal, etc that I didn’t click on something to get. Please fuck alllllllll the way off.
The browser implements the text selection behaviour, but how infuriating it is depends on how convoluted your page construction is.
On a simple page with no floats, overlaid elements, negative margins, absolute positioning, hidden stuff, and other css layout tomfoolery, it’s perfectly predictable. It’s only when designers do designer things does it start to break down.
“Winning” is like making it to max level in a mmorpg. It’s not the end but it is the beginning of the endgame.
dan@lemm.eeto Technology@beehaw.org•PSA: Reddit is Forcing Users to Accept Personalized AdsEnglish3·2 years agoBest of luck with that.
dan@lemm.eeto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What human power-ups/power-downs would you choose? Why?English2·2 years agoGimme dat blowhole mod
If you’re making a mil a year in revenue there’s a good chance your profit margin is tiny and licensing fees could obliterate it.
dan@lemm.eeto Gaming@lemmy.ml•Video-Game Company Unity Closes Offices Following Death ThreatEnglish2·2 years agoOmg they’re going to get n-bombed by a 12 year old to death!
dan@lemm.eeto Technology@beehaw.org•Password-stealing Chrome extension smuggled on to Web StoreEnglish4·2 years agoI am not sure how Manifest V3 is relevant here?
Because they literally tout security as one of the primary reasons for forcing it onto people.
https://developer.chrome.com/docs/extensions/mv3/intro/
The first line is “A step in the direction of security, privacy, and performance.”
https://developer.chrome.com/blog/mv2-transition/
“Manifest V3 is more secure, performant, and privacy-preserving than its predecessor.”
It’s the first thing they say.
If it doesn’t prevent a malicious extension from lifting your password in perhaps the most dumb and naive way I can think of, then it seems fairly disingenuous to describe it as “secure”.
dan@lemm.eeto Privacy@lemmy.ml•OpenAI releases enterprise edition of chatgpt. It says no data will be used to train modelsEnglish4·2 years agoThey use data, just not the data from the customers paying them for enterprise licenses.
Honestly fear of leaking customer data is the only thing that’s kept my work from spunking every single byte of data we have at some LLM service a lazy attempt to come up with a product they can sell with minimal effort. They’re gonna love this shit.
dan@lemm.eeto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•[Serious] Am I really the ONLY PERSON who thinks Elon Musk is just absolutely sexy?English111·2 years agoWow.
He looks like a plastic bag full of porridge with hair plugs.
Doing the lord’s work
Holy shit that’s too real. I come here to get away from work!
dan@lemm.eeto Technology@beehaw.org•PSA: Intel Graphics Drivers Now Collect Telemetry By DefaultEnglish12·2 years agoOk so it’s my fault that now someone at Intel knows how much porn I look at because I clicked “next” on a beta driver?
dan@lemm.eeto Technology@beehaw.org•PSA: Intel Graphics Drivers Now Collect Telemetry By DefaultEnglish34·2 years agoThey collect:
The categories of websites you visit, but not the URL itself
The information collected includes categorized web browsing history that shows how long and how often you visited specific categories of sites (i.e. social media, personal finance, or news). All site visits are classified into one of 30 categories. We do not collect URLs, web pages titles, or user-specific content without explicit permission from you.
Software usage: for example, frequency and duration of application usage such as Intel® Driver & Support Assistant, but not the application content itself such as specific actions or keyboard input.
Feature usage: for example, how much RAM you usually use or your laptop’s average battery life.
Other devices in your computing environment
Includes universal plug and play devices and devices that broadcast information to your computer on a local area network: for example, smart TV model and vendor information, and video streaming devices.
(the emphasis is mine, as is the minor reordering to not hide the browsing behaviour stuff at the bottom)
Yeah that’ll be a no from me there, bud.
100% on Safari with just Wipr.
dan@lemm.eeto Technology@beehaw.org•PSA: Intel Graphics Drivers Now Collect Telemetry By DefaultEnglish5·2 years agoI know. I don’t disagree. I’m just tired of everything being desperate to collect invasive amounts of information about me.
dan@lemm.eeto Technology@beehaw.org•PSA: Intel Graphics Drivers Now Collect Telemetry By DefaultEnglish4·2 years agoBecause they invariably record way more data than they need to.
Interesting thread. But I don’t understand why the data needs to be collected and correlated by a third party, can’t the ads themselves detect views and clicks? (that’s what they need right?)
Or am I missing something about the process?