Whenever I look at the comments of a Gamer's Nexus video, Steve often remarks on the hordes of bots he banned, but when I go to other videos, I usually am unable to tell what's real and what's fake. I guess that the commenters that have scantily-clad women as their profile picture probably aren't real, but are there other signs that I can look out for? Naturally, I don't attach more than a grain of credibility to YouTube comments, but I just want to really get a feeling of just how botted they are.
I would agree with a bit more nuance. We were taught that being "good", meaning kind, patient, etc., is reciprocal, and rightfully so. However, there are some people out there whose goal is nothing more than to ruin your day, and that goal won't change due to you being any "better". The winning move is to avoid contact with those kind of people, instead of hoping that they'll change their mind if you just flatter them some more.
Programs ran through Flatpak can only access permissions and directories that it has explicit permission for. This is perfect for a very small program that only does one thing, it can get rather awkward when you need it to access multiple storage volumes. For example, I wanted to have my Steam games stored on different hard drives, but they were never visible through Steam. I had to override the Flatpak permission to give access to my mounted disks for it to work.
Whenever I look at the comments of a Gamer's Nexus video, Steve often remarks on the hordes of bots he banned, but when I go to other videos, I usually am unable to tell what's real and what's fake. I guess that the commenters that have scantily-clad women as their profile picture probably aren't real, but are there other signs that I can look out for? Naturally, I don't attach more than a grain of credibility to YouTube comments, but I just want to really get a feeling of just how botted they are.