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Posts
49
Comments
357
Joined
11 mo. ago

  • I've never understood "pull yourself up by your bootstraps," which is impossible. No matter how hard you pull, you can't, say, jump a fence. The rich are inadvertently telling poor people that becoming rich by working hard is impossible.

  • They use sensationalism to make things sound worse than they are.

    They selectively report information, leaving out details that don't fit their agenda.

    They use misleading headlines, knowing that people often only read the headlines. They use words like "horrifying," "catastrophic," and "viral."

    They manipulate charts, graphs, statistics, and photographs.

    Balanced reporting isn't balanced if it pits a scientist against a conspiracy theorist.

  • Massive corporations own the media along with the likes of Rupert Murdoch. If you don't dig deeper, you will only believe what they want you to believe. The talking heads on TV are not journalists; they are paid actors reading whatever they are paid to read. Modern news is entertainment no better than the National Enquirer.

  • I will remember survivorship bias. If hard work led to success, then a poor person working three jobs should be rich. I've noticed that a lot of these stories are closer to "from rich to richer." Bill Gates dropped out of Harvard because his family could support his "hobby." He didn't have to work three jobs to pay rent, but he is set up as a rags-to-riches story, using elbow grease and grit to become the mogul he is.

  • That's why I do dispersed camping far away from other humans. I don't use campfires, I checked the forest regulations to see if there's any current fire restrictions in place, I pick up trash if I see it and I don't leave any of my own trash.

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  • We've had meetings spelling out to users what they should look for in a suspicious email. Then, once a week we would send out an email that was either legitimate or suspicious. We would ask them to look closely at the email and mark down on the questionnaire whether the email was suspicious or legitimate. A not insignificant number of people failed the test every week. Your average user just isn't equipped with the mindset they need to be safe on the internet.

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  • I'm not saying don't use the Internet. I'm saying be aware, be careful. Don't let companies sell your information. Use two factor authentication. Encrypt everything you can. Scan your system for malware. Don't open suspicious emails. Be proactive, but realize at some point someone could compromise your security.

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  • I figure it's best to assume that there is no privacy on the internet.

    I've been in IT to close to 40 years and I don't say anything online that I wouldn't say in public.