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2 yr. ago

  • Most of my bigger local malls have been pretty great, too. Whenever I go, they're bustling with activity and I love it. It's fun to make an outing out of it. Hit up the food court for so many guilty pleasure options, look around some cool stores, and be able to try on clothes before buying them (the lack of being the biggest reason not to buy clothes online -- some companies have really inconvenient return policies, too).

    But that's definitely not the case for every mall. There's a small one near me that is just sad. Despite being in a fairly busy area outside, it contain a bunch of empty storefronts that went out of business during COVID and still haven't found new tenants. I'm not sure why it's been that way for so long. Are there that few people looking to start businesses in that area? Or could the landlords just be massively overcharging? It sucks, though, cause I like being able to visit interesting shops in person.

  • It's crazy that even when people are told about this, they usually still defend it. I don't get why the heck any normal person would like the idea of spending a few months salary on a ring. It's such a terrible way to start a new marriage, especially with wages being what they are these days.

  • It doesn't usually go down when you pay debt off. In fact, paying off all your credit card debt every single month is a great strategy that will get you a good credit score. And is ideal, because that way you avoid the high interest rates that credit cards have.

    It also doesn't go down if you check it with sites like Credit Karma. I believe what you're thinking of is hard checks, which loan issuers use and they can slightly ding your score as they represent you about to get a new line of credit. Though honestly that part is pretty sketchy, since it applies even if you don't get a new loan.

  • Is that even unique to social media? We have "news" sites that do the same thing (like the various alt right ones). If the goal is to tackle misinformation, we should tackle misinformation directly.

  • You could say that about a lot of things, though. Video games and TV were commonly criticized this way. And it was a popular meme on Reddit that people would be so addicted to the site that they'd spend hours scrolling it.

    Criticizing tik tok is just popular on sites like this because people here really don't like tik tok.

    At any rate, parents can already try to restrict their children's access. But governments are gonna have a hard time doing so without hurting everyone as a whole (eg, see the attempts of some US states to require giving your ID to porn sites). Dunno if you remember being a kid, but I found my way around every restriction my parents set and I just disliked them for it.

  • I remember having one of those as a kid. For a few days, it was the best thing ever, till I got bored with it and never played with it again.

  • Also, is there even any need to tell people that parts aren't copyrighted? That'd be pretty tedious to do ("texture on model pot_interior_clay_2_cracked is not copyrighted"). But if a game has a mix of copyrighted and non copyrighted media, that basically means nobody can use the non copyrighted parts because they simply can't identify which parts those are.

    I suspect there's no need to tell people. After all, mixed media is already a thing. I can make a copyrighted video, for example, in which I quote some Shakespeare. The Shakespeare quote isn't copyrighted, but the rest is. I've never seen any kind of copyright notice mention this.

    So the net result might not be any different. Just if you steal assets from something, they might have a harder time identifying if they have a case of copyright infringement. Only if something was entirely AI generated would things likely change much. Though there's also some weird edge cases. Like what if a human makes a 3D model but an AI textures it. 3D models are basically never used without their texture. So what's the copyright implications of using videos of this textured model? Perhaps something for a very expensive legal case to figure out?

  • Well, nobody claimed they'd be a moon power, too.

  • You simply cannot have checked bags. If you're traveling for less than a week and don't need large liquids, this is usually pretty easy to do. You can have a wheely carry-on and a backpack as your personal item, which gives you a ton of storage. I don't need checked bags for the vast majority of travel I do and prefer to avoid it by all means possible, as it just slows me down and has the potential for the airline to lose my bag.

  • While I know they're past the point of it being feasible to reboot, it always surprised me that they didn't at least try to go the Star Trek approach of just starting a new show with a new cast in the same universe.

  • Education isn't a requirement to vote, so doesn't make sense to play a part in age restricting voting. A now-30 year old who dropped out of high school at a young age is allowed to vote.

  • Yeah, while I don't want to restrict anyone's voting, any logic against younger people voting is not nearly as strong as logic against older people voting. It's not just that they won't be a part of the world for as long (that said, it's entirely possible a 70 year old gets another 2 decades, so I don't think that's necessarily compelling reasoning). Mental decline is also an issue and arguably more relevant.

    The alt right doesn't like young voters because they claim they're too immature. But senility is very similar on the opposite end of the spectrum. Senile voters can be simply disconnected from reality and thus unable to make good choices.

    That said, you can't just draw an age limit and expect that to cover senility, since one person can be 65 and senile while another is 90 and of sound mind. So I don't think we should be restricting voting on either side of the age range (though we should let people as young as 16 vote -- we already trust them to do dangerous things like drive).

  • IMO that's being too fanatic. I love FOSS, but you don't have to use FOSS for absolutely everything. Making a FOSS product does not mean you need to use FOSS for everything. And sometimes the closed source options are simply the best. Eg, GitHub and Discord are widely considered the best options in their field.

    Also, at least before Twitter became such a shitty alt-right shit hole, many FOSS products did have twitter accounts! That's just part of promoting your product and providing an alternative place to contact and discuss. Eg, when Reddit went down, I'd usually check their twitter to get updates on it.

  • I was confused at first because 61 - 24 isn't 18, but then realized he did have a length of time out on parole before he was sent back for violating parole.

  • "What if climate change is a lie and we accidentally make the world a better place for nothing?"

  • That's a really great idea! More places should do that. Maybe then there'd be a lot fewer people losing all their money within years.

    In addition to major prize winners, it should also apply to people who have just started earning a massive income. Eg, professional athletes.

  • The "not vegan" scene is one of the funniest scenes of all time.

  • I wonder why Dbrand would even offer? That's pretty messed up and certainly makes me think less of them.

  • That's great. Good for them. Personally, I'm a lot more amenable to supporting Cuba. While certainly still deeply imperfect, I see Cuba as largely the victim of American bullshit sanctions.

    But the fact that Cuba is better doesn't change the fact that tankies regularly support China specifically. If you support two things, with one being good and one being bad, you're still supporting a bad thing. So I don't think your comment justifies support for China.

  • I think it also depends a lot on visiting versus living there. I'm also Canadian and the US is generally great to visit. There's some states I don't trust anymore nor want to give my money anyway, but the progressive states are great and for a large part, American culture doesn't really feel all that different from Canadian culture, especially as a non resident.

    They are considerably higher crime, though, and the way they approach guns just makes me extremely uncomfortable. I've never seen places like convenience stores be as locked down in any Canadian city I've been to compared to many American cities I've been to. I had a long distance relationship with someone who lived in Atlanta and wow does Atlanta feel unsafe compared to really any Canadian city (and I lived in Saskatoon for years, which is one of the highest crime Canadian cities).

    But as a resident? Ehhhh. I'd never want to live in the US, even though the opportunity has come up and I'd make so much more money if I did. Their politics can largely be ignored as a visitor, but as a resident, they'd actually matter a lot more. And their health care system is batshit crazy. Canadian health care has a lot of problems, but I wouldn't wish the American system on my worst enemy.