@icedquinn@wzqtparor@s8n@sun No, they pulled the Windows 10 Creators update moment where they deleted /home directories if a user ran one of three cleanup commands for systemd-tmpfiles.d.
That was caused by badly written documentation, but what's even worse about this is that one systemd maintainer (Debian dev) actively said that this is the intended behavior, closed few MRs that fixed some of it and downplayed the issue as social media drama created by well known trolls.
The thing where they delete /var/tmp content on a timer is a different issue in some distributions that implemented it.
@sun@icedquinn@wzqtparor@s8n It's not like systemd devs really care about new versions being stable. The recent tmpfiles fiasco convinced me that the only truly usable systemd versions are those that are few years old.
@sally@meso@mint To be completely honest I don't care at all. If some retard imports it on their server, it's a really nice filter for every fedi instance involved as that somebody would be probably more insufferable than mastsoc users.
@sally@mint@meso No it's not that. Mastodon introduced a feature a long time ago where you can disable the muted/suspended instances list without authentication.
@feld@mint The docs don't really matter. The rc script broken and the relayd/httpd configuration completely ignores running on a subdomain. I'll create a draft MR tomorrow with some of the fixes.
@iska@mint@BallsackGyroper1488 >Nowadays, emacs is slow, hurd is less complete than Yandere Simulator, The main issue with Hurd are the maintainers and mainly Stallman. I was somewhat involved in Hurd a long long time ago and almost every time some discussion about implementing features or optimization occurred, Stallman stepped in and gist of the conversation was almost always "The way I think it should be done is the only way it should be done." Every discussion got stonewalled by stupid nitpicks and Stallman's sometimes obviously bad opinions about the code.