Can you add this list? https://pastebin.com/CBgrXbxV
Also amateurporn.com and switter.at
Thanks
Hello! Thank you for opening your first issue in this repo. It鈥檚 people like you who make these host files better!
Hello @paranoicogm and welcome here,
About the list you linked, we can't add it to this repository because that will include blocking reddit.com (the whole infrastructure).
About amateurporn.com and switter.at it'll depend on @StevenBlack :smiley_cat:
Please learn more about hosts file here.
Cheers,
Nissar
Closing. Thanks Nissar, this user's account has been deleted.
@Sinfonietta, bump ^
Now that I am thinking about it, should reddit be on the social extension? It's not, but I think it qualifies? I think for people in a situation where they want to block social from their kids or what have you that should be using the Internet for research and homework and not watching funny videos or checking the latest memes, etc., reddit would definitely be a hole in that plan if it's opened. And if you're talking about something school-related, unless it's homework directly about reddit itself, you probably don't want your kids citing anything from reddit anyway. But in the end this is only one domain and easy to block on its own. Just opening that up for thought.
This is the same person from #531. Just another troll that don't give up. @StevenBlack if there is a way to block him in your repo i'd suggest you do so.
Oh, sorry, didn't catch that. I am working at the moment and didn't check the links. DISREGARD. Thanks, @dnmTX, for pointing that out. I edited my above comment. My reddit comment still checks out, I think.
I don't think there is a way to block someone via the GitHub web page as long as they keep deleting their user account and making a new one because all the bans are account-related. They are fair game to be reported to GitHub though and they can take a more dynamic approach to blocking them, since they are voiding the GitHub terms.
Until they are blocked, record their accounts so GitHub has more information on them. The more times they do it, the easier it is to lock in on them and block them based on more criteria.
josh78
paranoicogm
People like that have a weakness, being that they are impulsive and cannot control themselves to stop their repetitive behavior, even if they know negative consequences become more and more likely. This makes them highly predictable.
What happens when you act like a child and troll U.S. government officials and their families and don't know when to stop?:
https://thehackernews.com/2018/04/hacker-kane-gamble.html
You don't get hired as a security analyst anymore to work off your community service hours. They just throw you in prison because tech people these days are highly replaceable. Skills can be easily taught, but core values and culture are what's trending in human resources and recruiting these days.
@ScriptTiger yes I think Reddit would qualify for the social media extension.
Puzzling, isn't it, that nobody's mentioned that? It's a fair point.
There is always so much hype over letting reddit run free and not putting the little guy down and letting the news of the people get out there and whatnot that it's running right out of its rightful category.
Most helpful comment
Oh, sorry, didn't catch that. I am working at the moment and didn't check the links. DISREGARD. Thanks, @dnmTX, for pointing that out. I edited my above comment. My reddit comment still checks out, I think.
I don't think there is a way to block someone via the GitHub web page as long as they keep deleting their user account and making a new one because all the bans are account-related. They are fair game to be reported to GitHub though and they can take a more dynamic approach to blocking them, since they are voiding the GitHub terms.
Until they are blocked, record their accounts so GitHub has more information on them. The more times they do it, the easier it is to lock in on them and block them based on more criteria.
josh78
paranoicogm
People like that have a weakness, being that they are impulsive and cannot control themselves to stop their repetitive behavior, even if they know negative consequences become more and more likely. This makes them highly predictable.
What happens when you act like a child and troll U.S. government officials and their families and don't know when to stop?:
https://thehackernews.com/2018/04/hacker-kane-gamble.html
You don't get hired as a security analyst anymore to work off your community service hours. They just throw you in prison because tech people these days are highly replaceable. Skills can be easily taught, but core values and culture are what's trending in human resources and recruiting these days.