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I’ve never used a VPN with it either. But it should work, especially with an exit node in a country where Google has no incentive to/is prohibited from interfering with third party viewers.
I’ve never used a VPN with it either. But it should work, especially with an exit node in a country where Google has no incentive to/is prohibited from interfering with third party viewers.
I’m not suggesting that you should. But if the government that controls a TLD is not trusted, then no site under that TLD should be trusted either.
So it’s a rolling release?
Thanks. While I understand the convenience, SaaS is hard to trust.
If you trust the government that controls a TLD, then use the site. If not, proceed with caution.
I hope this doesn’t mean that the installed version is going away.
Good to know. Thanks!
It would also be nice if there were a way to use them anonymously. ChatGPT seems to allow this, but I’m not entirely comfortable with OpenAI.
I actually prefer these to true strawberries. They’re much more subtle and interesting.
Fair points. The site didn’t work in my browser, but it seemed like a cool idea. I’m glad it works.
In fairness, I’m probably just snarky because I expect a different standard from NPR.
LOL! I couldn’t figure it out either. My guess: an intern with the website password and too much time on their hands.
Love your handle, by the way.
That’s not how I read the headline. Given that this story is so old (months and months), if it’s newsworthy at all today, it should be “USDA Finally Updates Climate Maps for the First Time in a Decade.”
Anyone who needs them has been paying attention to the climate for years. It’s a neat bit of science reporting, but it’s hardly “Here’s What Suddenly Changed.”
Agreed. My issue is with NPR’s breathless headline and pretending that this is “news.”
Wasn’t this reported months ago? And zones didn’t suddenly shift just because the USDA said so. They’ve shifted over time because of climate change. The USDA just finally got around to catching up.
I used to be news director for an NPR member station, and even I think this is sloppy work.
Judge Alsup isn’t wrong. Yet Disney routinely writes its own copyright laws and has Congress pass them. Musk is just trying to cut out the middle step.
No, but he obviously felt that JSTOR could persuade a court to make it one. Poor kid.
Oh man I miss him!
Love the handle, BTW. :)
I think downloading is against Google’s TOS. Whether that makes it illegal is a question for a lawyer.