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  4. I’ve received many reactions to my latest blog post.

I’ve received many reactions to my latest blog post.

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  • Stefano Marinelliundefined This user is from outside of this forum
    Stefano Marinelliundefined This user is from outside of this forum
    Stefano Marinelli
    wrote on last edited by stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe
    #1

    EDIT: I've posted this - that will clarify even more things: https://my-notes.dragas.net/2025/10/10/when-bigger-stops-being-better/

    I’ve received many reactions to my latest blog post. Some constructive, others critical, but all useful to better understand different perspectives.
    However, two recurring dynamics emerged in the comments (mostly outside the Fediverse).

    First: I didn’t mention any names. I understand the disappointment, but naming them wouldn’t have helped anyone. Before publishing, I did my homework - that draft had been ready for over a year - and I even asked some of the people involved.
    They took action privately to warn friends and colleagues, with good results, but they didn’t want public exposure. Many years have passed, and that company no longer has the same relevance anyway.
    Some understood my choice (naming them could have meant serious legal trouble for me), but others started quoting US laws and amendments to "prove" that I could have safely done it. What many don’t realize is that the world isn’t the United States - not everyone plays by the same legal rules. And even if I won such a case, it would still mean wasted time, energy, and peace of mind. Cui prodest?

    Second: "Stories like that can only happen in Italy because there are so many small, family-run businesses".
    That one annoyed me more - especially because it often came from Italians themselves.
    First of all, I’ve worked in several countries, and I never said the story was about an Italian company.
    Second, small businesses are not a problem - they’re a strength. My experience taught me that large corporations tend to turn employees into replaceable parts of a giant machine. Customers become faceless numbers, almost subjects rather than clients. At some point, a company’s need for endless growth becomes a trap - not a service that enriches people’s lives, but a "necessary evil".
    And that, to me, is the real danger: believing that bigger automatically means better - in tech, and in life.
    I wrote about this a few months ago, and I still believe it even more strongly today: https://my-notes.dragas.net/2025/06/09/macbook-pro-vs-car-why-small-businesses-still-win/

    #ITNotes #BlogPost #TechCulture #SmallBusiness #Writing #Reflections #PersonalThoughts

    Hernán De Angelisundefined fosdembsdundefined Vincent 🐡undefined Morganundefined gabriele renziundefined 6 Replies Last reply
    0
    • Stefano Marinelliundefined Stefano Marinelli

      EDIT: I've posted this - that will clarify even more things: https://my-notes.dragas.net/2025/10/10/when-bigger-stops-being-better/

      I’ve received many reactions to my latest blog post. Some constructive, others critical, but all useful to better understand different perspectives.
      However, two recurring dynamics emerged in the comments (mostly outside the Fediverse).

      First: I didn’t mention any names. I understand the disappointment, but naming them wouldn’t have helped anyone. Before publishing, I did my homework - that draft had been ready for over a year - and I even asked some of the people involved.
      They took action privately to warn friends and colleagues, with good results, but they didn’t want public exposure. Many years have passed, and that company no longer has the same relevance anyway.
      Some understood my choice (naming them could have meant serious legal trouble for me), but others started quoting US laws and amendments to "prove" that I could have safely done it. What many don’t realize is that the world isn’t the United States - not everyone plays by the same legal rules. And even if I won such a case, it would still mean wasted time, energy, and peace of mind. Cui prodest?

      Second: "Stories like that can only happen in Italy because there are so many small, family-run businesses".
      That one annoyed me more - especially because it often came from Italians themselves.
      First of all, I’ve worked in several countries, and I never said the story was about an Italian company.
      Second, small businesses are not a problem - they’re a strength. My experience taught me that large corporations tend to turn employees into replaceable parts of a giant machine. Customers become faceless numbers, almost subjects rather than clients. At some point, a company’s need for endless growth becomes a trap - not a service that enriches people’s lives, but a "necessary evil".
      And that, to me, is the real danger: believing that bigger automatically means better - in tech, and in life.
      I wrote about this a few months ago, and I still believe it even more strongly today: https://my-notes.dragas.net/2025/06/09/macbook-pro-vs-car-why-small-businesses-still-win/

      #ITNotes #BlogPost #TechCulture #SmallBusiness #Writing #Reflections #PersonalThoughts

      Hernán De Angelisundefined This user is from outside of this forum
      Hernán De Angelisundefined This user is from outside of this forum
      Hernán De Angelis
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      @stefano excellent post, I wholeheartedly agree. When we buy from small businesses we:
      - talk directly to the owner, always someone who cares, put their hearts at work, are proud about doing it well, and have their lives dependent on it
      - do not pay for unexplainable overheads and time-lags, and will definitely not been led by the nose into nonsensical labyrints of buzzwords, lingo, meetings, powerpoint, and bureaucracy
      - contribute to the local economy

      Long live small businesses 🙂 !

      Stefano Marinelliundefined 1 Reply Last reply
      1
      0
      • Stefano Marinelliundefined Stefano Marinelli shared this topic on
      • Hernán De Angelisundefined Hernán De Angelis

        @stefano excellent post, I wholeheartedly agree. When we buy from small businesses we:
        - talk directly to the owner, always someone who cares, put their hearts at work, are proud about doing it well, and have their lives dependent on it
        - do not pay for unexplainable overheads and time-lags, and will definitely not been led by the nose into nonsensical labyrints of buzzwords, lingo, meetings, powerpoint, and bureaucracy
        - contribute to the local economy

        Long live small businesses 🙂 !

        Stefano Marinelliundefined This user is from outside of this forum
        Stefano Marinelliundefined This user is from outside of this forum
        Stefano Marinelli
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        @hdeangelis exactly!

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • Stefano Marinelliundefined Stefano Marinelli

          EDIT: I've posted this - that will clarify even more things: https://my-notes.dragas.net/2025/10/10/when-bigger-stops-being-better/

          I’ve received many reactions to my latest blog post. Some constructive, others critical, but all useful to better understand different perspectives.
          However, two recurring dynamics emerged in the comments (mostly outside the Fediverse).

          First: I didn’t mention any names. I understand the disappointment, but naming them wouldn’t have helped anyone. Before publishing, I did my homework - that draft had been ready for over a year - and I even asked some of the people involved.
          They took action privately to warn friends and colleagues, with good results, but they didn’t want public exposure. Many years have passed, and that company no longer has the same relevance anyway.
          Some understood my choice (naming them could have meant serious legal trouble for me), but others started quoting US laws and amendments to "prove" that I could have safely done it. What many don’t realize is that the world isn’t the United States - not everyone plays by the same legal rules. And even if I won such a case, it would still mean wasted time, energy, and peace of mind. Cui prodest?

          Second: "Stories like that can only happen in Italy because there are so many small, family-run businesses".
          That one annoyed me more - especially because it often came from Italians themselves.
          First of all, I’ve worked in several countries, and I never said the story was about an Italian company.
          Second, small businesses are not a problem - they’re a strength. My experience taught me that large corporations tend to turn employees into replaceable parts of a giant machine. Customers become faceless numbers, almost subjects rather than clients. At some point, a company’s need for endless growth becomes a trap - not a service that enriches people’s lives, but a "necessary evil".
          And that, to me, is the real danger: believing that bigger automatically means better - in tech, and in life.
          I wrote about this a few months ago, and I still believe it even more strongly today: https://my-notes.dragas.net/2025/06/09/macbook-pro-vs-car-why-small-businesses-still-win/

          #ITNotes #BlogPost #TechCulture #SmallBusiness #Writing #Reflections #PersonalThoughts

          fosdembsdundefined This user is from outside of this forum
          fosdembsdundefined This user is from outside of this forum
          fosdembsd
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          Hi @stefano, this story and the way you depicted it immediately remind me the Register.com "OnCall" stories (you should try to send them one or two :p ).

          The Reg also don't put names or countries on their stories, and nobody blame them for that or say gibberish about Brit companies.

          So, to me, none of those remarks are relevant.

          Stefano Marinelliundefined 1 Reply Last reply
          1
          0
          • Stefano Marinelliundefined Stefano Marinelli

            EDIT: I've posted this - that will clarify even more things: https://my-notes.dragas.net/2025/10/10/when-bigger-stops-being-better/

            I’ve received many reactions to my latest blog post. Some constructive, others critical, but all useful to better understand different perspectives.
            However, two recurring dynamics emerged in the comments (mostly outside the Fediverse).

            First: I didn’t mention any names. I understand the disappointment, but naming them wouldn’t have helped anyone. Before publishing, I did my homework - that draft had been ready for over a year - and I even asked some of the people involved.
            They took action privately to warn friends and colleagues, with good results, but they didn’t want public exposure. Many years have passed, and that company no longer has the same relevance anyway.
            Some understood my choice (naming them could have meant serious legal trouble for me), but others started quoting US laws and amendments to "prove" that I could have safely done it. What many don’t realize is that the world isn’t the United States - not everyone plays by the same legal rules. And even if I won such a case, it would still mean wasted time, energy, and peace of mind. Cui prodest?

            Second: "Stories like that can only happen in Italy because there are so many small, family-run businesses".
            That one annoyed me more - especially because it often came from Italians themselves.
            First of all, I’ve worked in several countries, and I never said the story was about an Italian company.
            Second, small businesses are not a problem - they’re a strength. My experience taught me that large corporations tend to turn employees into replaceable parts of a giant machine. Customers become faceless numbers, almost subjects rather than clients. At some point, a company’s need for endless growth becomes a trap - not a service that enriches people’s lives, but a "necessary evil".
            And that, to me, is the real danger: believing that bigger automatically means better - in tech, and in life.
            I wrote about this a few months ago, and I still believe it even more strongly today: https://my-notes.dragas.net/2025/06/09/macbook-pro-vs-car-why-small-businesses-still-win/

            #ITNotes #BlogPost #TechCulture #SmallBusiness #Writing #Reflections #PersonalThoughts

            Vincent 🐡undefined This user is from outside of this forum
            Vincent 🐡undefined This user is from outside of this forum
            Vincent 🐡
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            @stefano I can't directly compare it, but in France, we have some similar problems and corruption affects big and small corporations. So yes, your observations are right and it's not only happening in Italy :)

            Thomas :netbsd: :freebsd:undefined 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • fosdembsdundefined fosdembsd

              Hi @stefano, this story and the way you depicted it immediately remind me the Register.com "OnCall" stories (you should try to send them one or two :p ).

              The Reg also don't put names or countries on their stories, and nobody blame them for that or say gibberish about Brit companies.

              So, to me, none of those remarks are relevant.

              Stefano Marinelliundefined This user is from outside of this forum
              Stefano Marinelliundefined This user is from outside of this forum
              Stefano Marinelli
              wrote on last edited by
              #6

              @fosdembsd thank you.

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • Vincent 🐡undefined Vincent 🐡

                @stefano I can't directly compare it, but in France, we have some similar problems and corruption affects big and small corporations. So yes, your observations are right and it's not only happening in Italy :)

                Thomas :netbsd: :freebsd:undefined This user is from outside of this forum
                Thomas :netbsd: :freebsd:undefined This user is from outside of this forum
                Thomas :netbsd: :freebsd:
                wrote on last edited by
                #7

                @vinishor @stefano Having lived in both the US and France, I can confidently say there's no shortage of similar corruption in both countries. Significantly worse in the US.

                Stefano Marinelliundefined 1 Reply Last reply
                1
                0
                • Thomas :netbsd: :freebsd:undefined Thomas :netbsd: :freebsd:

                  @vinishor @stefano Having lived in both the US and France, I can confidently say there's no shortage of similar corruption in both countries. Significantly worse in the US.

                  Stefano Marinelliundefined This user is from outside of this forum
                  Stefano Marinelliundefined This user is from outside of this forum
                  Stefano Marinelli
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #8

                  @tfb @vinishor thank you!

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • Stefano Marinelliundefined Stefano Marinelli

                    EDIT: I've posted this - that will clarify even more things: https://my-notes.dragas.net/2025/10/10/when-bigger-stops-being-better/

                    I’ve received many reactions to my latest blog post. Some constructive, others critical, but all useful to better understand different perspectives.
                    However, two recurring dynamics emerged in the comments (mostly outside the Fediverse).

                    First: I didn’t mention any names. I understand the disappointment, but naming them wouldn’t have helped anyone. Before publishing, I did my homework - that draft had been ready for over a year - and I even asked some of the people involved.
                    They took action privately to warn friends and colleagues, with good results, but they didn’t want public exposure. Many years have passed, and that company no longer has the same relevance anyway.
                    Some understood my choice (naming them could have meant serious legal trouble for me), but others started quoting US laws and amendments to "prove" that I could have safely done it. What many don’t realize is that the world isn’t the United States - not everyone plays by the same legal rules. And even if I won such a case, it would still mean wasted time, energy, and peace of mind. Cui prodest?

                    Second: "Stories like that can only happen in Italy because there are so many small, family-run businesses".
                    That one annoyed me more - especially because it often came from Italians themselves.
                    First of all, I’ve worked in several countries, and I never said the story was about an Italian company.
                    Second, small businesses are not a problem - they’re a strength. My experience taught me that large corporations tend to turn employees into replaceable parts of a giant machine. Customers become faceless numbers, almost subjects rather than clients. At some point, a company’s need for endless growth becomes a trap - not a service that enriches people’s lives, but a "necessary evil".
                    And that, to me, is the real danger: believing that bigger automatically means better - in tech, and in life.
                    I wrote about this a few months ago, and I still believe it even more strongly today: https://my-notes.dragas.net/2025/06/09/macbook-pro-vs-car-why-small-businesses-still-win/

                    #ITNotes #BlogPost #TechCulture #SmallBusiness #Writing #Reflections #PersonalThoughts

                    Morganundefined This user is from outside of this forum
                    Morganundefined This user is from outside of this forum
                    Morgan
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #9

                    @stefano I love this! Several years ago I was approached by a rep from one of the big roofing companies here in the Southeast US, telling me they had come on my property (WITHOUT my permission!!) and inspected my roof, and it was at least 15 years old (duh, at that time I had owned the house for 10 years and hadn't had it worked on) and in severe need of replacement.

                    The first thing I asked him was who had given him permission to trespass on my property, and he was floored by that question. Apparently people around here are perfectly okay with a stranger performing an inspection (climbing on the roof!) without permission and just hoping they don't fall off and injure themselves? Anyway, after that I told him to leave and if his company contacted me again or trespassed again I'd go full Karen and get the police involved.

                    Once I calmed down from that, I called a self-employed roofer who was a customer of my company I had gotten to know over the years, and asked him to give me a quote. Turned out he was able to do it for about a third of what the big company wanted, he found and fixed some other issues (asking my permission first of course) the other company would have considered out of scope, and overall treated me like a person and not a number.

                    Local is always, ALWAYS better in my opinion.

                    Stefano Marinelliundefined 1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    0
                    • Morganundefined Morgan

                      @stefano I love this! Several years ago I was approached by a rep from one of the big roofing companies here in the Southeast US, telling me they had come on my property (WITHOUT my permission!!) and inspected my roof, and it was at least 15 years old (duh, at that time I had owned the house for 10 years and hadn't had it worked on) and in severe need of replacement.

                      The first thing I asked him was who had given him permission to trespass on my property, and he was floored by that question. Apparently people around here are perfectly okay with a stranger performing an inspection (climbing on the roof!) without permission and just hoping they don't fall off and injure themselves? Anyway, after that I told him to leave and if his company contacted me again or trespassed again I'd go full Karen and get the police involved.

                      Once I calmed down from that, I called a self-employed roofer who was a customer of my company I had gotten to know over the years, and asked him to give me a quote. Turned out he was able to do it for about a third of what the big company wanted, he found and fixed some other issues (asking my permission first of course) the other company would have considered out of scope, and overall treated me like a person and not a number.

                      Local is always, ALWAYS better in my opinion.

                      Stefano Marinelliundefined This user is from outside of this forum
                      Stefano Marinelliundefined This user is from outside of this forum
                      Stefano Marinelli
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #10

                      @kaidenshi thank you for sharing this! It's similar to my experience and it reinforces the idea that smaller business is usually better than larger, "more powerful" ones

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • Stefano Marinelliundefined Stefano Marinelli

                        EDIT: I've posted this - that will clarify even more things: https://my-notes.dragas.net/2025/10/10/when-bigger-stops-being-better/

                        I’ve received many reactions to my latest blog post. Some constructive, others critical, but all useful to better understand different perspectives.
                        However, two recurring dynamics emerged in the comments (mostly outside the Fediverse).

                        First: I didn’t mention any names. I understand the disappointment, but naming them wouldn’t have helped anyone. Before publishing, I did my homework - that draft had been ready for over a year - and I even asked some of the people involved.
                        They took action privately to warn friends and colleagues, with good results, but they didn’t want public exposure. Many years have passed, and that company no longer has the same relevance anyway.
                        Some understood my choice (naming them could have meant serious legal trouble for me), but others started quoting US laws and amendments to "prove" that I could have safely done it. What many don’t realize is that the world isn’t the United States - not everyone plays by the same legal rules. And even if I won such a case, it would still mean wasted time, energy, and peace of mind. Cui prodest?

                        Second: "Stories like that can only happen in Italy because there are so many small, family-run businesses".
                        That one annoyed me more - especially because it often came from Italians themselves.
                        First of all, I’ve worked in several countries, and I never said the story was about an Italian company.
                        Second, small businesses are not a problem - they’re a strength. My experience taught me that large corporations tend to turn employees into replaceable parts of a giant machine. Customers become faceless numbers, almost subjects rather than clients. At some point, a company’s need for endless growth becomes a trap - not a service that enriches people’s lives, but a "necessary evil".
                        And that, to me, is the real danger: believing that bigger automatically means better - in tech, and in life.
                        I wrote about this a few months ago, and I still believe it even more strongly today: https://my-notes.dragas.net/2025/06/09/macbook-pro-vs-car-why-small-businesses-still-win/

                        #ITNotes #BlogPost #TechCulture #SmallBusiness #Writing #Reflections #PersonalThoughts

                        gabriele renziundefined This user is from outside of this forum
                        gabriele renziundefined This user is from outside of this forum
                        gabriele renzi
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #11

                        @stefano eh, as an Italian who has been living abroad for many years, the instinctive reaction of our countrypeople of "it can only happen in Italy" is both funny and frustrating.

                        Alas *even that* is not specific to Italy, everybody thinks they're exceptions, tho some are louder and the specifics vary.

                        Apart from that: crazy story.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • Stefano Marinelliundefined Stefano Marinelli

                          EDIT: I've posted this - that will clarify even more things: https://my-notes.dragas.net/2025/10/10/when-bigger-stops-being-better/

                          I’ve received many reactions to my latest blog post. Some constructive, others critical, but all useful to better understand different perspectives.
                          However, two recurring dynamics emerged in the comments (mostly outside the Fediverse).

                          First: I didn’t mention any names. I understand the disappointment, but naming them wouldn’t have helped anyone. Before publishing, I did my homework - that draft had been ready for over a year - and I even asked some of the people involved.
                          They took action privately to warn friends and colleagues, with good results, but they didn’t want public exposure. Many years have passed, and that company no longer has the same relevance anyway.
                          Some understood my choice (naming them could have meant serious legal trouble for me), but others started quoting US laws and amendments to "prove" that I could have safely done it. What many don’t realize is that the world isn’t the United States - not everyone plays by the same legal rules. And even if I won such a case, it would still mean wasted time, energy, and peace of mind. Cui prodest?

                          Second: "Stories like that can only happen in Italy because there are so many small, family-run businesses".
                          That one annoyed me more - especially because it often came from Italians themselves.
                          First of all, I’ve worked in several countries, and I never said the story was about an Italian company.
                          Second, small businesses are not a problem - they’re a strength. My experience taught me that large corporations tend to turn employees into replaceable parts of a giant machine. Customers become faceless numbers, almost subjects rather than clients. At some point, a company’s need for endless growth becomes a trap - not a service that enriches people’s lives, but a "necessary evil".
                          And that, to me, is the real danger: believing that bigger automatically means better - in tech, and in life.
                          I wrote about this a few months ago, and I still believe it even more strongly today: https://my-notes.dragas.net/2025/06/09/macbook-pro-vs-car-why-small-businesses-still-win/

                          #ITNotes #BlogPost #TechCulture #SmallBusiness #Writing #Reflections #PersonalThoughts

                          jae[0]™ :dobbsinv: undefined This user is from outside of this forum
                          jae[0]™ :dobbsinv: undefined This user is from outside of this forum
                          jae[0]™ :dobbsinv:
                          wrote last edited by
                          #12
                          @stefano overall i felt your conduct was well done. ive been in a similar situation and its not easy to navigate. staying professional as you always do and finding common ground the best you can usually works.

                          to your point on eu/us. im a citizen of both. the general vibe in .us is blowtorch everyone on the internet (even businesses at times do it). whereas in .eu ive found reputation and following the guidelines to a t yields more fruit.

                          the only way ive stayed sane (relatively speaking) is to keep a small client base that's diverse in vertical and operations, show value, keep them on long retainers and clearly defined contracts that spell out project proposal initiatives and what not. its served me well.

                          btw the email migration reminds me of a similar situation when i migrated a healthcare entity from google to zimbra. this was over a decade ago. the client had an exclusive they did not disclose with a zimbra vendor which got ugly quickly. was fortunate enough at the time to have a client law practice (they keep me out of jail on red/black team gigs) who offered to settle the matter. luckily all could come to an agreement although i lost all revenue i kept the clients in a good spot. a year later ironically enough i was hired by zimbra to expand my migration tool.

                          really respect how you conduct yourself and how transparent you always are. ciao!
                          Stefano Marinelliundefined 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • jae[0]™ :dobbsinv: undefined jae[0]™ :dobbsinv:
                            @stefano overall i felt your conduct was well done. ive been in a similar situation and its not easy to navigate. staying professional as you always do and finding common ground the best you can usually works.

                            to your point on eu/us. im a citizen of both. the general vibe in .us is blowtorch everyone on the internet (even businesses at times do it). whereas in .eu ive found reputation and following the guidelines to a t yields more fruit.

                            the only way ive stayed sane (relatively speaking) is to keep a small client base that's diverse in vertical and operations, show value, keep them on long retainers and clearly defined contracts that spell out project proposal initiatives and what not. its served me well.

                            btw the email migration reminds me of a similar situation when i migrated a healthcare entity from google to zimbra. this was over a decade ago. the client had an exclusive they did not disclose with a zimbra vendor which got ugly quickly. was fortunate enough at the time to have a client law practice (they keep me out of jail on red/black team gigs) who offered to settle the matter. luckily all could come to an agreement although i lost all revenue i kept the clients in a good spot. a year later ironically enough i was hired by zimbra to expand my migration tool.

                            really respect how you conduct yourself and how transparent you always are. ciao!
                            Stefano Marinelliundefined This user is from outside of this forum
                            Stefano Marinelliundefined This user is from outside of this forum
                            Stefano Marinelli
                            wrote last edited by
                            #13

                            @jae thank you!

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                            • Francesco Tonioloundefined
                              Francesco Toniolo

                              Il secondo romanzo scritto da mia sorella è uscito in anteprima questo weekend a Stranimondi, dove ha fatto sold-out ❤️

                              "Evie è metà umana, metà qarinah, ma al momento si sente un disastro totale. Sta per affrontare l’esame finale per la patente di Magia Emotiva, ma se superare la teoria è stato un gioco da ragazzi, la pratica si basa sul controllo delle emozioni. E lei, quando si emoziona, ha davvero poco sotto controllo."

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                            • versodiverso :mastodon:undefined
                              versodiverso :mastodon:

                              @francina1909 @out Onestamente se a vincere deve essere PD (ma anche tutti gli altri partiti di sinistra attuali) poco cambia che vinca la destra.
                              Come ho detto, se ci fosse stata la sinistra al potere saremmo comunque rimasti legati a Trump, pro-Israele, inoltre non si sarebbe fatto nulla contro tassisti, balneari etc... e forse avrebbero tolto anche loro il RdC.
                              Ricordiamo che la sinistra ha salvato le TV di Berlusconi per molti anni, anche quando era al potere.

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                            • Elena Rossini on GoToSocial ⁂undefined
                              Elena Rossini on GoToSocial ⁂

                              @dumpsterqueer it's AMAZING as always 🏆​​

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                            • Elena Rossini on GoToSocial ⁂undefined
                              Elena Rossini on GoToSocial ⁂

                              @CyberSaloperie haha now I understand! I will follow your advice to the letter next time 😅​

                              Honestly, 1 minute 15 second for the confirmation on YunoHost (I timed it with a stopwatch) and 20 or so minutes offline was SUPER FAST all things considered ❤️​​​

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                            • Kevin from Supernatpodundefined

                              Good morning everyone!

                              Watching Ignoring Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Uncategorized book author fantasy writing
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                            • IT Notesundefined

                              The Email They Shouldn't Have Readhttps://it-notes.dragas.net/2025/10/08/the-email-they-shouldnt-have-read/#ITNotes #NoteHUB #data #horrorstories #ownyourdata #server

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                            • Stefano Marinelliundefined

                              I think the time has come to finish another article for my "Horror Stories", which will go on my blog.

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                            • Nat Weaverundefined

                              How about an #Introduction again, since I haven’t been very active here and I’m thinking of being more active.

                              Watching Ignoring Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Uncategorized introduction bluesky author writing lgbtq bisexual horror editing
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