How much do you want to bet that a sedan or wagon or anything other than a truck/SUV would not have rolled in that crash.
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slowbyrne@lemmy.zipto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•My Process in privacy(open for suggestions)English
0·1 month agoSignal supports Trump? Source? I know the trump administration uses Signal, but that’s like saying Air supports Trump because he also breathes air.
slowbyrne@lemmy.zipto
Technology@lemmy.world•A security researcher says Microsoft secretly built a backdoor into BitLocker, releases an exploit to prove itEnglish
4·2 months agoYour correct. It is redundant. I think I needed the lvm layer to get an installer to recognize the luks partition. Can’t remember if it’s Pop or Fedora. That installer bug might be fixed now though. One day I’ll check and update my drive so its just using btrfs on luks.
slowbyrne@lemmy.zipto
Technology@lemmy.world•A security researcher says Microsoft secretly built a backdoor into BitLocker, releases an exploit to prove itEnglish
15·2 months agoI like to use btrfs subvolumes inside a luks lvm volume for this reason.

From ConsumerReports in 2014
Yes tech and safety systems have improved in 12 years, and in this case the suv’s passengers might have been fine, but I suspect rollover survival stats are still worse. That’s not even taking into account how rolling vehicles travel farther while rolling, putting other people at risk.
That being said we’re only talking about rollovers here. Head-on collisions are a totally different story when you pit an SUV versus a regular sedan. But those results are more related to the differences in front crash zone height. And that’s only happening because car companies were allowed to categorize SUVs as “non-passenger work vehicles”, avoiding safety and emissions regulations. Here’s a great video taking about it from Climate Town