Bah, I see this was already posted here a year ago - only two comments showed up when I searched for the url before posting!
Deebster
Ériu, Banba and Fódla are from Lebor Gabála Érenn, Ireland's creation myth, and they each wanted the whole country named after them (and still can be, poetically). This is a mythologised history, not etymology.
Also, downvoting someone you're debating with is extremely bad form.
The names Ireland and Éire both derive from Old Irish Ériu, which in turn comes from Proto-Celtic ɸīweriyū meaning "fertile soil". The Classical Latin name for the island of Ireland, Ivernia, also comes from this same root
Not sure why you're mentioning Ireland, did you think it was named after Kathy Ireland?
then unapproved by Lennart Poettering
No, you've misunderstood, here is a quote from your own source:
A merge request asking for this change to be repealed was struck down by Lennart
It was a reversion that Poettering rejected, the PR stands.
Also, there's things like the Mediterranean that is much saltier than the Atlantic, despite plenty of water flowing back and forth. There's sealife that's only found in the Med, like the Mediterranean monk seal.
The bot appears to be down
Oh, thanks for telling me...
Bot is back online.
Ah yes, I see what you mean. OP has posted content from Ten Epstein Revelations You Might Have Missed, which is the article that I see after the Israel/X story.
You scrolled past the (annoying) "read more" button and are now on the next article.
Yeah ok, I guess that's what's meant.
I'd be interested to know how the patterns changed - perhaps requests moved to IPv6 which made grouping request origins harder, or maybe too many unconnected users were coming from a single IP and getting false positives (leading to bad UX and support requests).
Throttling efforts led to "brownouts" via 429 errors
Does this mean for the (ab)users, or for the repo? If it's for the bandwidth hogs, then the brownouts are properly a good thing, as it'll force people to pay attention to these otherwise unmonitored systems.
Also, if it makes the upstream service seem flaky and unreliable, it could convince users to set up the proper caching proxy just for self-interested availability reasons.
I can see some companies happily paying for access, as they'll think it's easier than paying someone internally to manage a proxy/mirror, especially as on-prem is unfashionable lately.
The Register article: https://www.theregister.com/2026/02/25/bcachefs_creator_ai/
koverstreet post on Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/bcachefs/comments/1rblll1/comment/o6tmlib/
I loved this bit, I think everyone in tech has a similar story of some kind.