This will be referring to recently introduced laws essentially banning all/any abortion to be carried out (in some states even in extreme cases like rape/incest, or to save the life of the mother), but outside of that an illegal abortion might be due to it being done later in the pregancy than is legal, or without following required processes e.g. requirements to get scans first, alert the father, or have a consultation (most of which are often just traumatising anti-choice measures). Also as you say, using an unlicensed practitioner or unsafe method, yeah. Which aside from money, is sometimes due to fears of repercussion from their community or partner about either the pregancy or getting an abortion, so they seek back-door options or try to do it themselves without proper care.
Aardonyx
Yet another reason to be annoyed about Brexit
If you federate with Threads, dont Meta have that federated user and content data cached on their servers? Producing content outside of Threads and posting it to Threads still gives them content, and information about you. Much like how people without Facebook accounts still have shadow profiles from being featured in Facebook users' pictures and posts. The only solution seems to be (though maybe I misunderstand) not to federate or engage with Threads servers. This would be too philosophical a point for the vast majority of Internet, and especially ex-Twitter, users. Mastodon instances would have to explicitly defederate which could kill their userbase if the traffic flows to Threads, which it did in a matter of hours.
I didn't see this until just now! No notification outside of the app, my inbox inside the app got a (1) unread icon when I refreshed earlier.
Is there a /c/nothowgirlswork yet...?
Notifications have been very spotty for me on Jerboa (not tried the others) but they are implemented. Just not always effectual for some reason.
I'm a Relay user. I found the amount of ads and pushed content/gimmicks on the official reddit app and 'new' mobile website (which is already straight up hostile to browser users, very intrusively pushing the app) aggravating and found old.reddit not super usable on mobile, where I spend most of my life (RIP).
I was hopeful the Relay dev could find a pricing mechanism which would enable him to continue, but to be honest, as long as I know where my main communities will migrate to I'm no longer broken-hearted that I wont be on reddit - although I feel for the devs who have had so much work ripped out from under them in this way. The direction of Reddit as a company is clearly laid out before us with spez's and admins' responses and what is looking to happen with piracy, NSFW etc content, and they do not want to support all the things that make it great. They seem to almost hate its whole raison d'etre - its widely open and extensive community forums, development/tech led userbase, its potential for a very easy-to-read but user-specific or incredibly niche experience if wanted.
I understand how this means they are not profitable like more algorithm-intensive and centralised social media companies with stronger ad platforms, and I would, like the devs, very much understand some sort of pricing for API access. But their aggression and lack of communication, the kind of PR- or IPO-led choices they're making and general 'snoo'tiness (sorry) makes it clear that they're a company I no longer really support. Especially if they're taking anything Elon says seriously, blimey.
I support the reddit userbase and community, I'm not loyal to a random brand - I've been on there for >10 years as well but only because it felt like the website was just the vehicle for the underlying communities, rather than the headline company plastering itself on everything (apart from the occasional r/place sort of event). Now they're pushing their branding over the content so much I'm glad to be rid of it, just like meta and twitter.
I'm not sure they're 100% GDPR compliant on their approach to user account & data deletion tbh. But I'm not sure and I'm not a lawyer or anything.
Basically their approach to deletion is (or at least, was) that you can ask them to deactivate your account. After this, it cannot be reactivated, your username is unavailable. However, if you want all your comments/content to be deleted, you have to go through and do it manually (this would take me months, personally...) before deactivating your account. If you deactivated your account already, your data and content is still there and you can't go back and delete it (your comments and posts are now disassociated from your dead username). Admins can't reopen your account and can't (or won't) delete it themselves.
This would theoretically be sort of okay, but what we're seeing is that your manual comment/post deletion must only be a 'soft delete' because admins can clearly restore your deleted or modified comments. I'm unsure if they would be able to do this whether you deactivate your account or not - I can't remember if those who have had this happen deleted their accounts before the posts were changed back. However I'm not sure if there's anything more they would do to actually delete your user data if you email [email protected] with a specific GDPR request under art 17 (right to be forgotten). I can't find that online quickly.
I think this would only apply if you are an EU or UK citizen? If you're Californian you could refer to CCPA regulation. A couple other states have different privacy laws too that may help but they're all different. It may be worth posting on a Privacy or legaladvice community on here to ask what Reddit's approach is and if it holds up.
They're absolutely teeny as well. I wish we had more of them here in the UK. Goldcrests are still wonderful too, though, and they're more common.
Try typing it as [email protected] into the search bar of feddit.uk on your mobile browser and subscribe via the sidebar?
Maybe I am being pessimistic, but asking volunteer reddit mods to drop tools for more than 48h during such an interesting time for the platform is feeling about as realistic as asking your alcoholic uncle to stay sober at a wedding reception with an open bar. Can they really stay away?
You still need to sign up to/log into Threads (via Instagram) to have a Threads account or be active on there though, so what makes it theoretical? If they counted all Instagram accounts as Threads accounts it'd instantly be in the billions surely.