Uh, there are plenty of Nazis and tankies on fedi. Chances are you’re using software written by hardcore tankies (Lemmy devs). Not everyone is "in the know". They just follow their brands and influencers. And most don't really care, they don't engage too much, just retweet and like the latest football results or whatever the outrage algo puts in their feed. Most people don't think deep thoughts about their social media platform.
Been watching PWHL - it's free on Youtube! It's amazingly good hockey and broadcasting is generally really well produced as well. I'd love to see the league grow and for that they need money. Wish there was a way to do that without dropping into the dirty pit dubious bedfellows that the NHL keeps, but unfortunately I think that might be a hard ask at this point.
this is potentially the last social identity you have to create.
..as long as you stay centralized on the central BlueSky instance. Once you move out to a (potential, future) federated server, that identity (and it's super duper verification) doesn't follow you.
Also, you can't easily/fast search in voice data and you end up implementing all kinds of weird and costly workarounds like AI transcription in order to make voice meetings searchable. Voice is great for telling stories around camp fire, but it's awful way to convey and store information in a online forum.
Lemmy’s core values of decentralization, privacy, and user autonomy
I'm sorry, but is privacy really one of Lemmy's core values? Because fediverse has no real privacy features (that I know of), in fact, federation and ActivityPub makes privacy features pretty hard to implement. Could you please elaborate and link to the source of this?
I think at this point it's pretty clear that BlueSky is in the traditional social media business instead of being in the decentralized social media business.
Maybe that's a good decision for BlueSky, they certainly seem to have the growth at the moment, but I think we probably have to forget the dreams of it ever pushing the decentralization angle again.
So SS7 vulns have been known since 2008 and publicly written about since 2014. Various cybersecurity agencies have been regularly warning people for years. Before watching some random 12 minute YouTube video, you could at least summarize if there’s any new research in it?
If it’s for work, I’d suggest using whatever works for you best. Sounds incredibly frustrating so I don’t know why’d you be so set on ditching windows. Use the tools that work for you. Having said that, I’ve been running Linux since early 0.99 kernels and Debian since 1.3 and stability is really unmatched these days.
Your screen flicker issues with browser sound like hardware acceleration related bugs and I’d hazard a quess that random freezes and reboots have something to do with graphics drivers as well. But of course it’s impossible to tell without logs, which you didn’t provide.
Yeah. On Twitter as well