Tire spikes are the only option.
who tf subscribes to this?
I’d bet mastodon saw an increase, but i haven’t seen the numbers.
It’s also hard to get a good count since it’s not centralized. So whatever numbers we do see, could be wildly underreported.
The named email says Abbott’s teams are working to “verify and confirm compatibility”, so it’s unclear if this is an actual issue or just a precaution over what they think could be an issue.
There’s several other posts from other news articles that just get to the point and are less click-baity.
“Child poverty increases sharply after tax credit expiration” (PBS)
“Many Americans facing hardship as benefits created during COVID-19 end” (PBS)
“US Child poverty jumped and income declined in 2022 as COVID benefits expired” (modified slightly from the AP title)
Sure, but my point is that the article title is burying the lede by not pointing that out in the title. There’s also like 4 articles posted that specific detail already.
title sounds like clickbait. it’s so weird to use collapsing, when the real story is the covid era programs are expiring (as OP thankfully points out, thanks OP).
I don’t think we know.
Makes me wonder of the dev team is on a much-needed vacation or if they only run nvidia gpus. lol
I’ve met a ton of people that just don’t care. The problem often isn’t that they don’t know companies are collecting a shit-ton of data. That’s really not new or isolated to tech companies.
“If I get better ads and it saves me time, what do I care?”
“I’m getting something for free. What does it matter if they know?”
“It’s too much work to avoid”
Someone in another thread said he has a mastodon account. Dunno if he posts there or not.
Ive used pihole and also just removed the network’s settings.
If you want to stream, i don’t know how useful any of these mitigations are. You’re giving them some data to subscribe and use. Even if you share accounts, who knows what the apps collect.
In this case, it’s closer to paying to beta test.
This only sorta works for today and if your friends never share images or videos online. The ever-increasing amount of people taking pictures and filming and posting them online means the day is quickly approaching where you could be identified and tracked through other people’s content, security & surveillance cameras, etc.
If stores start adopting the tracking used at Walmart and the Amazon biometric data, social media will be the last of your worries.