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If you're a privacy enthusiast, you probably clicked a link to this post thinking it's going to vindicate you; that it's going to prove how you've been right all along, and "normies just don't care about privacy", despite your best efforts to make them care. That it's going to show how you're smarter, because you understand the threats to privacy and how to fight them.
Unfortunately, you're not right. You never were. Let's talk about why, and what you should do next.
So, first of all, let's dispense with the "normie" term. It's a pejorative term, a name to call someone when they don't have your exact set of skills and interests, a term to use when you want to imply that someone is clueless or otherwise below you. There's no good reason to use it, and it suggests that you're looking down on them. Just call them "people", like everybody else and like yourself - you don't need to turn them into a group of "others" to begin with.
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Le pagine del sito che contengono un link a questa pagina.<br />
Curioso riguardo cosa voglia dire? Leggi <a href="https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backlink" target="_blank" title="Backlink su Wikipedia">questo articolo</a>.
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All the pages of this website containing a link to the current page.<br />Curious about what this means? Check <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backlink" target="_blank" title="Backlink on Wikipedia">this article</a>.
If you more tips and advice like these, you can become a monthly patron on my GitHub Sponsor Page for as little as $5 a month; and your contributions will be multipled, as GitHub is matching the first $5,000!
This gist is all about Homebrew, so if you like it you can support it by donating to them or becoming one of their Github Sponsors.
Add numbers to Firefox tabs for easier Ctrl+n tab switching
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Comparison of features in various Markdown flavors
Comparison of syntax extensions in Markdown flavors
I created a crude comparison of the syntax of the various common Markdown extensions to have a better view on what are the most common extensions and what is the most widely accepted syntax for them. The list of Markdown flavors that I looked at was based on the list found on CommonMark's GitHub Wiki.