Other accounts: EvilCartyen@lemmy.world

  • 3 Posts
  • 16 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 3rd, 2023

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  • Thanks - I have an icotera i4850 router which claims to support NAT loopback, but I can’t figure out where to do it and it seems like the manual is gone from the internet :) Might have to ask my internet provider if they have a PDF somewhere.

    Edit: D’oh, it’s a checkbox in the port forwarding interface! Thanks a bunch, didn’t know what to look for before your reply :)










  • Within Danish law, yes. This is a so-called ‘sympathy conflict’ which is legal. The Danish model for the work market is that conflicts are legal until a signed agreement exists with a union.

    When a signed agreement (overenskomst) exists, strikes are not legal until it is time to renegotiate the agreement, which happens every 4 years.

    This system was put in place in 1899 following a four month lockout of more than half the Danish unionized workforce. In the end, the workers won the right to unionize, and the employers won the right to lead and distribute work under the terms on the specific agreement made with the unions.

    As a result, Denmark does not have state mandated minimum wages or really much state meddling in the work market. It’s all self organising to a degree.

    Edit: Here’s a bit in English about the September Compromise in 1899





  • I mean, if they were looking to do a genocide I don't think they'd bother to use precision strikes, warming knocker bombs, and tell civilians to flee.

    Seems to me Hamas with their rhetoric of ending Israel and killing all Jews are the genocidal part. Don't want to see what would happen if they had the military Israel has.

    Make no mistake, Israel is still an apartheid state run by awful people, but this is not genocide. This is trying to minimize casualties in an urban combat situation.