In the Soviet Russia, bees are cooking you.
In the Soviet Russia, bees are cooking you.
Wherever the app’s code is on. I usually go around finding the link in the store page or through the search engine. Most of the time, they end up on GitHub and GitLab, sometimes on Codeberg or other instance.
Paranoid section ahead: Don’t blindly trust the issues list, closed or open, because there are still ways to permanently delete those, hence giving bad actor a way to hide evidence of the on-going security problem.
I look at the latest release date. At leisure time, I would also go and check repository and issue tracker to see whether something serious is being ignored. If it’s crucial for business, I would spare time investigating the source code itself.
I would not necessarily say that many apps uploaded to F-Droid and other repositories are unsafe, because I don’t have all that energy to audit anything I use. What helps me to stay on the safe side is reading into things - enclosed descriptions and names may look like a small factor to some, once they tread the sources, but it saves me both the time and trouble. Sloppily written stuff usually implies a sloppy code, a lax attention to details on the developer’s side.
Is this a TAWoG reference?
180 * pi? That’s a lotta rotate 💀
This behavior can be disabled, right? … Right?
Huh? He literally dropped a Piped link…
Teachings of Nihilism have saved countless lives, I believe. And it’s not like they are ought to poison the brain: often than not, it’s just the tool to get out of stalemate.
All the hype is gone already and I’m invested in the more grounded Minetest.
Newcomers to Lemmy, I ask you- to not scale images just to upload them in bad quality to make someone’s eyes sore.
Really? Good on you!
Now, this is some effect of memes. Don’t underestimate the power of fiction. 💪😀
On individual posts and comments, and in our honor system 😆
Yep! The same image flashed back in my mind.