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Cake day: June 2nd, 2023

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  • Dave@lemmy.nztoScience Memes@mander.xyzYep, it's me
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    19 days ago

    Haha I have one of these.

    Them: how come most trees are green?

    Me: Oh, well the leaves have s…

    Them: OK goodbye

    I also have another one that likes to hear all the details, and as a young kid they would ask me to explain stuff while they fell asleep.

    Me: OK, sleeping time

    Them: Can you tell me why we don’t two suns while I lie down?

    Me: oh, boy, well… [then I talk until they fall asleep]

    I think they were about 3 or 4 when we did this.





  • Normally we are a small enough market that it takes a while to be worth sorting out whether they comply with our laws.

    One that comes to mind is that data can only be used for the purpose it’s collected, so I suspect adding this and opting people in would probably not be allowed. Grey area though, as it’s not clear to me (IANAL) whether updating TS & Cs and telling people would be enough to be considered getting user consent. I suspect not, though, I think it would need to be opt in so you’ve actively got user consent.

    So, most likely it’s because our privacy laws are a bit stronger than their threshold, but also possibly because a small country of 5 million people (where paypal isn’t that common) isn’t worth spending lawyers on to work out if they are allowed to.


  • In my experience, sites aren’t implementing their own credit card payments. Paypal and Stripe are common, and there are a couple of local payment portals as well.

    If it’s not one of those I probably wouldn’t use it, but in general it would never be the case that you can’t pay with a credit card, where as PayPal is probably an option 1/3 of the time.





  • PayPal didn’t come to my country until after online banking was already established, so I probably get a different experience. Banks here also issue (Visa) debit cards for free with a standard no fee bank account, so pretty much everyone has one. Debit cards being like a credit card in terms of paying online, but it uses money in your account.

    Our biggest ebay-like site has their own payment portal for instant payments, done to copy what eBay did with paypal except you can’t use it outside of paying for things you bought on that site. But people are generally paying wuth a debit/credit card. And bank transfers are very common, but I wasn’t buying stuff online in 2001 so I’m not sure what it was like then.

    Even today, paying with paypal in my country is far more likely to be a credit/debit card payment than a bank account one.



  • I can easily search up people talking about both the Windows and MacOS system wide spell checks. While for Linux you just find people talking about how dumb it is everything uses different implementations: https://www.reddit.com/r/linuxquestions/comments/hu4ktg/does_systemwide_autocorrect_and_typo_flagging/

    As for NZ English words, it would mostly be words that have come from the Māori language including place names and people’s names.

    In theory having multi-language spell check would solve most of the issues, but I’ve never seen Māori as a supported language on Linux.

    For some examples of words, there are place names like Taranaki, Te Anau, Te Awamutu. People’s names like Hone Harawera or Apirana Ngata. And common words and phrases that have made it into English like Kia ora (mostly used in English as a greeting) and Aotearoa (a name for New Zealand). There will also be company and product names as well.






  • I believe blocking an instance hides posts from your feeds but nothing else, but it’s worth testing.

    I have lemmit.online (reddit copy) blocked, but I can still search for a specific post and view it. I have also seen others complaining that when they bad an instance they still see comments from users on that instance, so at least at the moment it seems it just hides the posts from your feeds.


  • Ah right! OK first off, you can block all of Lemmy.world with one action now.

    Secondly, Lemmy now supports image proxying (with a new feature in Pictrs 0.5, which I believe was also introduced in Lemmy 0.19). I’m not sure which instances have it enabled but in theory you can check the source of images for remote users who have posted images.

    Lemmy is already a strain on hard drive storage so I don’t think many people have enabled it (proxying will store the images on the Lemmy server for a set period of time).

    Thanks for the explanation by the way, it makes sense.