Texas State Rep. James Talarico using biblical scripture to tear down conservative Christian arguments

  • @[email protected]
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    411 year ago

    Just so you and everyone else is aware. In the link you posted, everything after the question mark is a tracking id, using the link without that part of the link works perfectly fine and reduces traceability.

        • @[email protected]
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          51 year ago

          Question, is that true for all links?

          Like can I just cut out the question mark and back for all links I send?

          • Vanix
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            31 year ago

            I think the others already gave enough detail but if you’d like to learn a little of the more technical stuff for how the URLs we see (and can edit before viewing) work, look into HTTP “GET” requests!

          • Lemminary
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            1 year ago

            You have to deduce what each key=value pair means after the question mark, and they’re separated by ampersands (&). This varies by website.

            YouTube uses the format “v=…” to point to its videos, and “t=…” to specify the time of playback.

          • @Utilael
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            21 year ago

            Not always, like the piped link above uses the parameter after the question mark to know which video to load so you would lose crucial information. It’s often pretty obvious what is important and what is not though. The parameters are separated by an & so you can cut off anything extra if you want. You can also just try it in your browser and make sure it still works before sharing it.