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Joined 2 months ago
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Cake day: October 21st, 2025

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  • Vicinus@piefed.ziptoVoyager@lemmy.worldCan't vote anymore
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    9 days ago

    I’m having the same issue (started 2? days ago).

    I can up and down vote posts but not comments.

    Also, don’t know if related, but I noticed my votes on comments were getting removed a week ago. I’d upvote something and then come back to it the next day and my vote would be gone (not up voted, no error).

    I tried logging and and back in, with no effect.

    Edit: Phone Info - Galaxy A15, Android 16

    Tried clearing cache, no effect

    Edit 2: issue resolved.






  • Vicinus@piefed.ziptoAsk Lemmy@lemmy.worldEbook reader recommendations
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    26 days ago

    Caveat: I haven’t purchase or used another e-reader since I bought my first one (Kobo) ~15 years ago.

    My Kobo still works and the battery still lasts like a week or longer before needing a recharge.

    I don’t think I’ve run into a book file it can’t read, but I mostly stick to epubs and PDFs.

    I’m pretty sure it has an online store, if that’s important.

    For your requirements, I have no idea if a planner has been implemented in the last decade, but I would suspect Kobos can read Libby library books (not sure what they are though). I believe my ~15 year old Kobo has a sync feature, but I don’t use it. So that’s probably available as well. For easy on the eyes, I’m assuming brightness settings, which Kobo had and I used on occasion (they may have adaptive sensing now).

    I recall Kobo used to be marked as the “open” platform, so unless something has significantly changed, Kobo shouldn’t lock you in or charge you a subscription fee.

    Best of luck. Hope you are able to find an e-reader that works for you.

    Edit: Just found this website with a bunch of Kobos compared. It looks like some have Dropbox sync and “Dark Mode” (I assume for easier on the eyes).



  • The audit covered every public-facing component of Mullvad’s online presence, including the website, the Tor-only Onion service, the rsync setup, and the internal content management system (CMS). Each of these elements was examined for common attack vectors, misconfigurations, or any signs of hidden data collection.

    I believe checking the “internal content management system (CMS)” is what they are using to say there were no logs.

    They linked a more detailed report in the article, but I didn’t look at it. It may contain something different than my takeaway from the article.