@rysiek @silmathoron @xpil come to think of it, the reverse attack might be possible too (e.g. having latin letter a amidst cyrillic characters). maybe we’d need to list lookalike characters comprehensively
Notices by /xarvos/ (xarvos@nixnet.social)
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/xarvos/ (xarvos@nixnet.social)'s status on Tuesday, 07-Jun-2022 04:27:47 UTC /xarvos/ -
/xarvos/ (xarvos@nixnet.social)'s status on Tuesday, 07-Jun-2022 04:22:53 UTC /xarvos/ @rysiek @silmathoron @xpil how about just adding a notice “this URL contains non-ascii characters which might look like ascii characters” needs the users to know what ascii characters are though
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/xarvos/ (xarvos@nixnet.social)'s status on Friday, 11-Mar-2022 00:33:21 UTC /xarvos/ @Stoori Fucking is no more 😔
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/xarvos/ (xarvos@nixnet.social)'s status on Wednesday, 02-Mar-2022 14:10:47 UTC /xarvos/ If you hard then you hard
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/xarvos/ (xarvos@nixnet.social)'s status on Thursday, 24-Feb-2022 05:45:41 UTC /xarvos/ @schratze Mit einem Mastodonföderationskurznachrichtendienstkonto kann man Föderationskurznachrichtendienstuniversumspersonen folgen -
/xarvos/ (xarvos@nixnet.social)'s status on Saturday, 19-Feb-2022 22:18:53 UTC /xarvos/ The total word count of the W3C specification catalogue is 114 million words at the time of writing. If you added the combined word counts of the C11, C++17, UEFI, USB 3.2, and POSIX specifications, all 8,754 published RFCs, and the combined word counts of everything on Wikipedia’s list of longest novels, you would be 12 million words short of the W3C specifications.
What :blobcatdizzy:
https://drewdevault.com/2020/03/18/Reckless-limitless-scope.html
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/xarvos/ (xarvos@nixnet.social)'s status on Monday, 10-Jan-2022 15:36:07 UTC /xarvos/