Hi, I’m Stanford. I’m 27 and have a passion for #technology, mainly #networking, #linux and #servers.
I enjoy tinkering with different servers and stuff, I just like to learn things by doing it 😜
Multiple people were able to reproduce this.
So, the assumption that the screenshot is fake is probably wrong.
Altogether, please don’t take screenshots as proof of anything.
They are always subjective to how much you trust the source they are coming from.
See https://pleroma.envs.net/objects/5ed98350-328b-42ff-8005-4137fea8642d for a more complete statement.
It sounds like military service with cameras 😆
I wonder if it is somewhat related to that?
https://discuss.grapheneos.org/d/5235-stepping-down-as-project-leader-of-grapheneos
Now do it with IPv6 😅
Mh… there is still some beach left where you can add even more lanes!
This will definitely solve the problem!
Looking through the rest of the comments, I think there were already enough explanations.
Making the accusation towards Lemmy that admins can see passwords in clear text is misleading.
It suggests that this is different from other platforms, which it is not. All admins can get your password from/for their respective websites.
Either by logging the traffic before the password gets hashed or by modifying the application so that the password gets transferred in plaintext.
This applies to Lemmy, Facebook, Google and literally any other service where you enter a password.
What you are saying is somewhat misleading 😒
But did you know over 50k people can see your Facebook password 🤔
But seriously, everything you send to a website/server can, of course, also be seen by it.
This has always been the case everywhere. I am a little surprised that this is suddenly something new…
Reading this, I wonder if we talk about the same Debian 😆
I bet his instances will be one of the few actually federating with them 😔
I sense you do not like cats that much 😆