

The only one being cheap here is uber, don’t be thick.


The only one being cheap here is uber, don’t be thick.


You can give the delivery driver a tip when they get there. I’ve been doing that for decades.


That’s a good way to perpetuate the cycle. Also, who tips BEFORE getting a service?
It’s funny how I don’t need to clarify that it’s sarcasm for people to know that it is.


I would say that Uber is a shitty company. Tipping is bs, you should get paid a decent salary and it’s your employer’s responsability to do that.
As usual, what a poignant observation from pizzacake.


If that data were encrypted it would at least reduce the number of people that has access to it.


It’s also only possible because the information they used (BFI) is unencrypted.
Of all hills, this is the smallest one.
Not the issue, no. Your reply just didn’t make sense. No one, at any point, made an “ad hominem” attack/comment. Also, that term and “poisoning the well” have nothing to do with each other.
Didn’t seem that way since neither the original comment nor their response is an “ad hominem” attack. But ok dude, you do you.
You replied to the wrong comment then ¯\_ (ツ)_/¯ why would you reply to the second comment if you were referring to the first?


It’s because people don’t like to be publicly proven wrong or humilliated or whatever you want to call it. Unless they come to that conclusion themselves or you can express your point in more polite and less preachy manner, you’ll always get significant pushback.
While that is correct, it’s not what the comment you replied to did. There’s no criticisim to you as a person. It simply says that the argument reads as “whataboutism” so yup, your reply doesn’t really make sense.
I’m not sure you know what ad hominem means.


You should also not be ysing a corporate laptop for your private stuff. If you do need to use it, you can do use the password manager the old way, just read from your phone and manually type it in.
Lastly, since you’re proposing a corporate scenario, you wouldn’t be able to install a random program on your laptop. IT would either block the installation or you’d have to explain why you’re installing random programs on your work computer.
This is getting pathetic dude, just move on.


Some environments restrict USB access for security reasons.
Where are you even trying to use your password manager??? You’re absolutely batshit dude. I’m not reading this wall of text.


What do you mean by “gargantuan” stack? I have a single docker container for vaultwarden that was very easy to set up and it uses less than 100mb of ram.
Not sure about the client claims though. I haven’t really looked into it that much. Are you saying all versions of the client and extensions of BitWarden have issues?


EDIT: Forgot to mention the worst part about KeePassXC. It’s vibecoded crap.
I replied to that comment. You’re assuming that compromising vaultwarden is somehow easier than compromising nextcloud. No idea why. Intercept the password where? I’m using a local client and only syncing the vault. You seem to be pretty unfamiliar with how vaultwarden works.
adb commands