Since when did windows in Windows cover the taskbar? I thought the whole idea was that it's always exposed unless you do the hide thing in the settings.
I've seen a bunch of posts lately saying that there are a lot of new people to Mastodon and offering tips. Since we all use this place differently, I figured I might as well offer some things I do to enjoy it more. <li><p>Block and mute liberally. It's not hostile, it's not personal, it's simply part of curating your feed. That includes filtering on words and hashtags. </p></li><li><p>Use hashtags. A lot. I forget to do it myself but it's the best way to connect with others interested in whatever your posts are about. But be cool, keep them relevant and not spammy. And don't forget you can follow hashtags.</p></li><li><p>Hide your follower count. This isn't a big deal for everyone, but I like not knowing how many followers I have. It prevents that common focus on follower count and enables be to focus on interactions with people. Which is why I'm here. </p></li><li><p>Add alt text to images when possible. It helps for people using screen readers but it also helps for when images don't load because of Internet filters, low throughput, etc. It can also help provide context to an image. </p></li><li><p>Post and let post. We're all here for different reasons and use this place differently. Don't police others unless they are actually harmful. Not adding alt text or using acronyms you don't know are not harmful. </p></li>
All that said, welcome. And happy shitposting. :brdKnife:
> A vulnerability was identified in the email parsing library due to improper handling of specially formatted recipient email addresses. An attacker can exploit this flaw by crafting a recipient address that embeds an external address within quotes. This causes the application to misdirect the email to the attacker's external address instead of the intended internal recipient. This could lead to a significant data leak of sensitive information and allow an attacker to bypass security filters and access controls.