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112
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • it sounds like he was listing to sell the actual game, not just 45 minutes of footage of the game...

  • He knew in September 2005 that certain iconic symbols in society can get away with anything: "I don't even wait. And when you're a star, they let you do it. You can do anything. ... Grab 'em by the pussy. You can do anything." ... January 2016 he described the same crowd phenomenon: "I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody, and I wouldn't lose any voters, OK? It's, like, incredible."

    Even if people get enough of Musk and Trump, the pattern holds true that if you can get yourself into the right area of the spotlight, crowds will flock like moths and people will be overwhelmed by the media power of a person... and laws, conventions, even murder will be allowed. The rules won't apply. And humanity is playing this pattern out just as it always has. What's new is that in the past 100 years we have had the ability to organize our history from all over the world and see that these social patterns of authority and power happen time and time again... but we seem unable or unwilling to stop from forming crowds and letting it play out.

    With Trump, it was all so obvious he wasn't a earnest or positive intending person. He just knew he was in the spotlight that so many people would follow. For all our psychology therapists and other media stars, nobody could stop the crowds from forming for terrible outcomes or reverse the trend of accepting anti-science anti-truth nonsense. His pattern may mostly play out, and his health can't hold up forever... we are still left with the problem of what he has demonstrated is possible.

  • interesting concern, because SpaceX has a lot of military secrecy and corporate espionage concerns... new refugees with ready-to-use desirable technology skills are pretty much a standard cover technique to get a spy inserted into your organization.

  • I feel like people don’t understand me. If I show even the slightest vulnerability, I get told I’m playing the victim

    Sorry to hear. I'm well into several years of trending that direction and facing the realization that I have very little control over it.

    I find that big waves of this attitude have been hitting multiple societies, we are told to "pick ourselves up by our own bootstrap" and seek "private personal therapy" - but there is no real weather report about how people are under the influence of many different information systems and outright campaigns to influence attitudes and reactions.

    There’s just a deep and profound sadness inside me, and my emotions are so raw that I just curl up like an armadillo.

    it's become a lifestyle for a year for me now, and the couple years before that weren't much more than a couple people with semi-neighborly contact. It's not a nice precipice to observe and realize you are folding into.

  • A software problem can often be fixed remotely, a physical problem requires physical access.

    makes a difference in asking for help,

  • The general population doesn't seem to want to work with distant outside nations. Just the replies to an article you see like this on social media see people unwilling to state what Bernie Sanders is saying. It's true... like the pandemic, climate change is impact the whole word, but people want to say it is one local political party or another. The faith in humanity coming together over a common positive cause I hope has reached bottom and can improve.

  • starring into the abyss of contempt, chaos, and bigotry… it also makes me sad.

    I started experiencing it in 2014 when Cambridge Analytica was building up their pro-Trump stuff. Reddit and Facebook really changed that year, and it's never gone back.

    I really hope that people have a sense of urgency that it took a lot of time to get humanity more towards positive after world war 2, and we could do better, and it really isn't worth hating each other on this planet.

    A world-wide funeral for those we lost in the pandemic would be nice, but it just doesn't seem to form. Plenty of people with social power who could spread the idea.

  • Despite these newly known problems, there have been exactly no improvement whatsoever to the moderation tools. It is honestly unsettling and terrifying.

    It's bewildering how the development team has ignored the problems with data not federating properly and the performance of the app.

  • The kind of people who keep calling it an essay are the exact kind of people I don’t want around anyway.

    The TLDR behavior and won't click offsite links and references and want a constant stream of tiny little ideas. There was a time when Reddit wasn't like that and it became the culture of TLDR and downvote-disagree.

    Reddit could have single-handedly taken on clickbait in 2014 or earlier by people replacing news headlines with sincere earnest descriptions. But the clickbait became what people swam in.

  • Given how unstable Lemmy's performance is, adding even more incoming activity is likely to cause more crashes and problems. And it isn't as if there are aren't 1200 other Lemmy instances out there who are showing content from Lemmy.world

    I remember when Beehaw's signup code in Lemmy was so broken that there was a huge backlog.

    It seems to me that Lemmy overall has slowed down a lot,

    That's helped with the crashes in recent weeks, less data, less crashing. Lemmy.world has over 9000 communities, moderating all those entrances is huge, and the SQL performance problems in Lemmy are aggravated by all that additional data.

  • My problem with laws is that people rarely pay attention to their growth and creation, and if they do, it's often with the intention of adding more.

    There never was supernatural laws, yet people still largely want to regulate how their neighbors dress, marriage approval, etc. I really don't think religion came from the sky, I think it absorbed what people already wanted. And I think there are modern-day meme systems that are just as much a force as any classic easily-identified religion from 1500 years ago or older.

  • The constant crashes of Lemmy from performance issues have really been hard on me, because I just don't like seeing it happen to people. It's honestly been the worst web site in terms of stability I've used in over a decade.

    Lots of good comments here on this discussion.

  • I think this is bullshit.

    I think it is exactly how people are behaving. And I can even recall witnessing many people first hand who flip a newspaper to the sports section. Never learning anything about science news, medical news, unless it's some kind of social column about a diet.

    People wanting to cut out and block things they don't want to read in a newspaper is what I consider the "default behavior" of most of humanity. No surprise they do not care about the news their friends share. An intelligent computer system that filters out (based on topic/content study) what they don't want to see before-hand is always going to be popular with such people.

    “One of the effects of living with electric information is that we live habitually in a state of information overload. There's always more than you can cope with.” — Marshall McLuhan.

  • Welcome back to Beehaw!

  • This gets it’s own section. Look, the largest issue with Lemmy performance is currently the database. We’ve spent a lot of time attempting to track down why and what it is, and then fixing what we reliably can. However, none of us are rust developers or database admins. We know where Lemmy spends its time in the DB but not why and really don’t know how to fix it in the code. If you’ve complained about why is Lemmy/Beehaw so slow this is it; this is the reason.

    There is a dedicated Lemmy community, !lemmyperformance@lemmy.ml

  • it looks like there is no reddit alternative to a reliable subscription feed right now.

    Lemmy was not built for scale, and the everything from large-community moderation to federation message copying is going through problem identification and optimization.

    The Beehaw.org website is regularly malfunctions for me, showing the Lemmy 0.17.x problem of getting the wrong voting data on postings. Hopefully the forthcoming 0.18 removal of websockets will eliminate a lot of that.

    Lemmy, as it stands today, really isn't ready for anything near like the activity of from page /r/all community on Reddit.