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1 month agoThe company I work for did the same, it’s not easy to completely replace an onpremise virtual farm but we’re working on it :)
The company I work for did the same, it’s not easy to completely replace an onpremise virtual farm but we’re working on it :)
Do you really believe they don’t have backups? Especially since it seems selling content for AI training was their plan for quite a while?
Or that they didn’t make full backups a couple years ago before the protest, anticipating a lot of users would try to delete their comments?
I think the only way to truly delete anything from reddit would be living in EU and enforcing a GDPR request, but even in that case, I believe it would be very difficult to check they actually comply.
Why? It’s the point of Lemmy, being able to participate in communities regardless of where they’re hosted and where your account is registered.
It’s a zero-day vulnerability but the article doesn’t say what it is.
Microsoft states it affects all on-premises servers, they say their cloud is not affected.