Countries tha #pieday apply to.
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David Penfold :verified: (davep@infosec.exchange)'s status on Wednesday, 15-Mar-2023 00:56:01 JST David Penfold :verified: -
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silverwizard (silverwizard@convenient.email)'s status on Wednesday, 15-Mar-2023 00:56:29 JST silverwizard @davep Isn't it just a YYYY.MM.DD thing? -
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silverwizard (silverwizard@convenient.email)'s status on Wednesday, 15-Mar-2023 00:58:38 JST silverwizard @davep Whoa!
I've always seen the YYYY truncated off, and then March 14th at 1519 is when you eat your pie -
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David Penfold :verified: (davep@infosec.exchange)'s status on Wednesday, 15-Mar-2023 00:58:39 JST David Penfold :verified: @silverwizard more a MM.DD.YY thing.
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silverwizard (silverwizard@convenient.email)'s status on Wednesday, 15-Mar-2023 01:13:53 JST silverwizard @davep I see them a lot - not as a date standard but definitely a common use standard
arew.org/what-countries-use-yy…
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David Penfold :verified: (davep@infosec.exchange)'s status on Wednesday, 15-Mar-2023 01:13:55 JST David Penfold :verified: @silverwizard Does any country use YYYY.MM.DD though? It sounds more like a data storage standard along with UTC, not a standard used by actual humans.
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David Penfold :verified: (davep@infosec.exchange)'s status on Wednesday, 15-Mar-2023 01:34:00 JST David Penfold :verified: @silverwizard ooh, interesting.
So US, Iran, Korea(s?) and China can celebrate #pieday
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