It absolutely shouldn't be possible compromised or not for someone who has gained unlawful access to start pushing malicious code to production as long as proper security is in place
ward2k
I think it's worth mentioning the most of players of Infinite don't play it through steam but rather through gamepass on PC
The vast majority of players are also on Xbox, Steam metrics are a pretty terrible view in this instance
It seem the pinned thread has been removed discussing the change of megathread on r/Piracy (as far as I can see), it had a link to a new megathread, stating that a mod had write access to the previous one and had started writing comments about the new mod team (though personally I could not see any such comments in the megathread)
It might have been some kind of mistake or misunderstanding then?
I do kind of think Reddit will be very hesitant about assigning mods to piracy subreddits since it might look like them encouraging piracy
In all honesty in surprised Reddit hasn't been more heavy handed removing subs like these
The wiki on r/piracy is just the megathread, as far as I know they're one and the same
But you can also report police speed traps on Google Maps too? (At least in the UK not sure if it differs by country)
In fairness this has been built into Google maps now as well
I did previously use Waze but honestly lately Google Maps seems to have overtaken it in functionality
An error log for some Scala code, tried the usual thing of Googling full error log, key words etc and nothing really returned any actual useful results (or none at all)
Put the full log into Bing and the first few results were straight from stack overflow and a raised GitHub issue describing the errors cause
I think people on r/piracy need to see the writing on the wall. Reddit is getting rid of 3rd party clients, is obviously not happy with large subs swapping to NSFW content and is trying to push for things to be as advertiser friendly as possible
At some point they're going to go after piracy subs more aggressively which is probably why it's better to make the switch earlier rather than later
I see a lot of comments there saying when that happens "they'll just make a new sub" missing the fact once Reddit starts banning piracy users/subs the new ones that spring up in its place will only last a week or two before being banned again
I feel like 90% of the questions on there anyway are just pointless if people actually read the megathread
"What is a good site for movies", "how do I torrent", "should I use a VPN" "help I've got a virus"
All questions that get repeated daily
You absolutely should look about moving away from LastPass and to something such as Bitwarden/1Password
LastPass has had major security breach a while back and plays very fast and loose with it's security. It is not recommended