Founder of Reddit and one of the developers of the RSS standard.
Huge Free speach advocate and very against intellectual "property". He wanted knowledge to be free and accessible for everyone and killed himself after he was accused of things that could've brought him to prison for a very long time. He probably did these things which are kinda similar to things Sci-Hub does nowadays.
I'm pretty sure coke addicts don't want speed in their coke
Honestly I don't know if that's such a great idea. We'll see how it will be the case with malware.
They actually are in a position to do this.
Nobody is switching to let's say PeerTube because of something YouTube does as long as not every creator is switching too
No. There's a new law that forces Apple to allow 3rd party apps on Apple devices in the EU, but it still takes some time for it to be active
Lately? That always has been the case. You just forget them. Remember when they removed the dislike button? Or polls? Any any other feature?
PeerTube won't take off unlike Lemmy did and still does. People won't switch from YouTube to PeerTube because the creators they watch aren't there. Also the YouTube Algorithm is what people make use YouTube in the first place.
Reddit isn't creator based and doesn't necessarily need an Algorithm since the users choose what to see anyways. So the Lemmy experience isn't actually that mich worse than the reddit experience
Apple and Google? I'm confused
It's more like leaving an important letter in the open for everyone to read. It's certainly your fault for leaving it that open.
But that really isn't OpenAI's fault. Whoever was in charge of securing the patients data really fucked up.
It is an app when you install it. There literally is no downside of using a PWA over a native app
Today I've seen a "meme" (It was more of a drawn image) where they laugh about Ukrains committing suicide and portrait it as the right thing to do. That was on Lemmygrad though