
A furious, emotional and fed up Steve Kerr pleaded with senators to do something about the mass shootings. pic.twitter.com/fmERY4izFl
— Ohm Youngmisuk (@NotoriousOHM) May 24, 2022
God bless him for calling out Turtle. Kerr is absolutely correct.




Thank you for reading today's post. Have an InterStellar Day! ~PrP






Did You Know?
The two small holes found on the prongs of most U.S. electrical plugs are a safety feature—the holes make contact with small tension points inside the outlet to help hold the plug in place.
Did You Know?
What we, in the English speaking world, call “beer steins” aren’t called such in Germany (the country with which the heavy hinge-lidded earthenware drinking mugs are most closely associated). In Germany, they are called “krug” or “steinkrug” and the usage in English is believed to have originated from the truncation of the German word for stoneware jug or tankard, “steinzeugkrug”.
it’s never safe to tap or click on links that come from senders that you aren’t familiar with. If a message ever looks fishy, you’re better off reporting and blocking the number and deleting the message.
I was taught the difference between a tankard and a stein is the lid on the tankard
DuckDuckGo made a deal with the devil. Due to a confidential search agreement, the DuckDuckGo browser does not block all Microsoft trackers. What’s worse, DuckDuckGo only acknowledged this “privacy hole” after it was discovered by a security researcher.
As you may know, DuckDuckGo pulls its search results from other services, primarily Bing. You may also know that clicking a Microsoft-provided ad in DuckDuckGo will reveal your IP address to the Microsoft Advertising service—this is explicitly stated on DuckDuckGo’s website and in the company’s search engine.
But this partnership goes a bit deeper than we thought. Security researcher @thezedwards found that the mobile DuckDuckGo browser does not block Microsoft trackers on third-party websites, such as the Facebook-owned Workplace.com.
It’s clear that DuckDuckGo doesn’t offer the level of privacy that it promises to users. And unfortunately, I’m not sure that any company or software can protect your browsing data. The internet doesn’t run on privacy or anonymity; it runs on money, and your data is worth a lot of money.
Did You Know?
A typical two hour movie, if traditionally shot on 35mm film and played back at 24 frames per second, requires a little over two miles worth of film for theater playback. You can figure out how much film a movie requires by simply multiplying the run time in minutes by 90.