this post was submitted on 09 Feb 2024
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Software Gore

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Welcome to /c/SoftwareGore!


This is a community where you can poke fun at nasty software. This community is your go-to destination to look at the most cringe-worthy and facepalm-inducing moments of software gone wrong. Whether it's a user interface that defies all logic, a crash that leaves you in disbelief, silly bugs or glitches that make you go crazy, or an error message that feels like it was written by an unpaid intern, this is the place to see them all!

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Community Rules - Click to expand


These rules are subject to change at any time with or without prior notice. (last updated: 7th December 2023 - Introduction of Rule 11 with one sub-rule prohibiting posting of AI content)


  1. This community is a part of the Lemmy.world instance. You must follow its Code of Conduct (https://mastodon.world/about).
  2. Please keep all discussions in English. This makes communication and moderation much easier.
  3. Only post content that's appropriate to this community. Inappropriate posts will be removed.
  4. NSFW content of any kind is not allowed in this community.
  5. Do not create duplicate posts or comments. Such duplicated content will be removed. This also includes spamming.
  6. Do not repost media that has already been posted in the last 30 days. Such reposts will be deleted. Non-original content and reposts from external websites are allowed.
  7. Absolutely no discussion regarding politics are allowed. There are plenty of other places to voice your opinions, but fights regarding your political opinion is the last thing needed in this community.
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  9. The moderators retain the right to remove any post or comment and ban users/bots that do not necessarily violate these rules if deemed necessary.
  10. At last, use common sense. If you think you shouldn't say something to a person in real life, then don't say it here.
  11. Community specific rules:
    • Posts that contain any AI-related content as the main focus (for example: AI “hallucinations”, repeated words or phrases, different than expected responses, etc.) will be removed. (polled)


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If spammers can abuse something, they gonna abuse it

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (1 children)

never trust user input. the web site should be looking for and filtering this shit out.

the other one (the submission page at the university, was right above this one in my 'all' feed) shows it better--with a full valid link in a text box. should be filtered and rejected by the form submission handler and never inserted into the database. in the case of no 'http' as part of it, links still follow a format, and those should be rejected too.

mod_security filters that shit out on my sites, the rules on what's allowed in a form field hardly ever get 'tested' anymore since i turned that on.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Never trusting user input, sure. That, I know. And probably the university's devs do as well.

However, it's not the university's website's fault that the email client is converting the name to a link.

So what you're saying is, email clients should not convert link-like text to actual clickable links. Correct?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

the university's form allowed the link or link-like string in the text field. that's on them.

mail clients should at least be warning users about links it converts from text into clickable markup. yes.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago

We're going in circles. How do you know a name that looks like a link is actually a link or a real name?

How do you solve that problem in a way that names that look like links are still accepted?

Plus the way email clients parse plain text is not the university's website's responsibility. Today, it's links. Tomorrow, it's "embedded AI prompts" or "mini-QR codes," or "new format telephone numbers," etc.