![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/188e5e95-75e1-43cb-bd94-037016f7c6f0.png)
![](https://programming.dev/pictrs/image/170721ad-9010-470f-a4a4-ead95f51f13b.png)
You’re supposed to do that anyway. Code on SO is licensed as CC BY-SA, which requires attribution.
You’re supposed to do that anyway. Code on SO is licensed as CC BY-SA, which requires attribution.
The article doesn’t list the infected site. So, if you want to keep yourself safe by avoiding it, well… fuck you, I guess.
Edit: just skimmed through the original Group-IB report and they redacted the name of the site. Not the article’s fault that millions of people are still in danger to this malware.
Good for you. My oldest backlog task is from 2012. And that was imported from the previous ticketing system (AKA an Excel Sheet).
I was curious too, so I looked into their Github issues. Apparently, SQLite doesn’t play well with k8s due to the distributed/networked nature of the environment. According to comments in the pull request, that seems to be the main driver. And apparently, Radarr already has a Postgres option.
Though, there are requests going back to 2017 to support it…just because, I guess? That person seems to just want all their data in one DB for some reason.
“What did that code look like two minutes ago?”
“Oh, ok.”
404 should be John Travolta
The links from that post and top comment point out that that initiative was dropped. It got mired down in bikeshedding from hundreds of opinions and SO eventually just said, “Fuck it.”
The MIT announcement thread was edited with the cancellation announcment:
The top comment from your link points out the current license:
And CC BY-SA is the only license listed on the official help page.