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2 yr. ago

  • Definitely agree that the the common-with-Mastodon viewpoint of exclusively using chronological feeds seems to have over-corrected too far. Can you imagine if the threadiverse was sorted that way? It would be insane and essentially unusable at scale - so we can at least acknowledge that sorting algorithms have a useful place and are not some unsalvageable, irredeemable evil. I wish there was something like a bunch of open source algorithms which the user could choose between in whatever UI they're using. At the very least there should be some acknowledgement that I, the user, don't have an identical level of interest in every account I follow, or even in every topic which the same account posts about.

    And while microblogging platforms seem to have it worst, there have also been times in the threadiverse where I've subscribed to a community/magazine only to later unsubscribe because the activity levels it produces in my feed are much higher than my interest levels in it. So even here (where we have sorting by "hot" etc), some kind of user-configurable weighting would be nice to better match how I actually want my feed to work!

    edit: typo

  • Searching for the phrase, documentation matches for Taiga so maybe you're right!

  • Would be curious to read the LLM output.

    It looks like it's available in the linked study's paper (near the end)

  • For what it's worth I generally agree with you, and especially think the people who treat /all as their own personal feed are nuts, but nonetheless it's something that some people do 🫠

    Everyone has their own preferences about how to use things!

  • Browsing the global/all feed is one way to find new communities, and some people just like using it in general rather than defaulting to a subs-only view.

  • Just be aware that some places/connections have trouble connecting with it: https://catbox.moe/faq.php (under Connectivity Issues)

  • For better or worse, I doubt converting all the volunteer force to paid positions is in the cards - at least for the foreseeable future. But if people are financially secure (which is not exactly the case right now, generally speaking), encouraging volunteer work is fine imo. The "if" is doing a lot of the heavy lifting there though @_@

  • Crazy that this is how I found out about this. I guess that's what I get for not being enough of a repost bot 😔

  • I seem to be missing some context - anyone want to fill in the rest of the class?

    Edit: the image being shown to lemmy users everybody else is not being shown to mbin users me and/or fedia.io users (unclear) some unknown subsection of mbin users including me, so here it is for those like me: https://imgur.com/q4zuZzz

  • The mbin equivalent (which is relevant to the OP) is More -> Open original URL or Copy original URL

  • Unfortunately seems to not work for mbin (which fedia.io runs)

  • computer sad

  • I didn't see any examples of inspection failures for Fair Trade.

    From the article (with emphasis added)

    On one estate, listed as a supplier for Lipton and Twinings, we met estate worker Darshini.

    The estate had Rainforest Alliance and Fairtrade certification. While Lipton only sources tea from Rainforest Alliance-certified estates, Twinings has its own set of ethical standards.

    Darshini has been a tea plucker for nearly three decades, since she was a teenager, and knows the meaning of a hard day’s work. A map showing Sri Lanka's tea growing regions.

    She was one of dozens of women plucking tea in a remote field on the day the ABC visited.

    The work is arduous. To receive the minimum wage she needs to pluck 18kg of tea before the daily weigh-in to meet her quota.

    “I have only plucked 6kg so far. I have to pick another 12 kilos,” she said. “If it’s 15 kilos or less I’ll get half pay.”

    When the workers finish plucking for the day they must march several kilometres to the weigh-in, with heavy sacks of tea leaves on their backs.

    Tea plucker Darshini has to pick 18kg of tea a day or risk being paid less than the minimum wage.

    Rainforest Alliance and Fairtrade certification is intended to ease some of the harsh conditions inherent in this kind of work.

    For workers on this estate, it should guarantee they “always have access to safe and sufficient drinking water” and “sufficient, clean and functioning toilets” either in the fields or close by.

    But the workers here told the ABC the plantation had provided neither.

    “We do not have these facilities while we are in the field,” said tea plucker Maheswarie. “There is no toilet in the field.”

    They also said that they regularly lost access to drinking water in their houses on the estate.

    Breaches of Rainforest Alliance standards should be uncovered through routine audits, but according to Maheswarie, the auditors come but managers “don’t allow us to talk to them”.

    “Maybe the auditors don’t get to talk to us because we might tell them the truth,” she said.

  • It sounds like The Shovel is participating in anti-semantic attacks and should be reported to the appropriate authorities (Weird Al, maybe?).

  • But (it sounds like) you're talking about voluntary grouping, where if you dump 100 people together at a party or networking event or whatever, theoretical-person Amy will vibe best with certain types of people, and so ends up chatting up Cleo, Ming, and Kiara because they share similar interests / humor / whatever -- but there's nothing actually stopping someone from outside of that from walking up and chatting with the newly-formed group. That's kind of what (I thought) we had now in the fediverse, where for example I can go talk about Australian news on aussie.zone, jump to lemmy.world to talk about fediverse stuff, swing by redd.that to look at Unraid updates (all communities I'm part of), but then browse the incoming feed of everything coming into my instance and view a whole lot of communities which I'm not part of, most of which I never will be. It's (nearly) all open-by-default. Yes, there's some blocking / defederation etc, but the default state is that users on one instance can (whether or not they actually choose to) talk to other instances.

    If a new user randomly picks any instance from the top 50 (of any fediverse software, excluding maybe Pixelfed since that's probably the least interoperable with the others) to join up on, chances are very good (but will vary based on personal interest) they'll be able to participate in like >=90% of the conversations that they want to in the sense that their instance is federating with all the people and communities they're interested in.

    What I'm thinking-out-loud-ing ("arguing" sounds a bit more assertive than what I'm aiming for) is that this might not be how ActivityPub would optimally be used; maybe just because ActivityPub could allow 90% of users to talk to 90% of users, it doesn't mean that's actually the best way to use it. Maybe it serves the user's interests better if there are clusters of "sub-fediverses" instead.

    As a grounded example: Beehaw partially self-isolates from the wider fediverse (it's not just that users could communicate but don't; the connection is severed) in an effort to better maintain its vibe and values. I had always viewed that as the exception to the norm, but maybe having (e.g.,) clusters of instances that only communicate with a comparatively smaller amount of other instances, say the other instances in its "cluster" plus a few other clusters only (as opposed to most instances communicating with most other instances) is a different -- and potentially healthier -- way to architect things. So I guess partial, selective federation rather than (what felt to me like) the current goal of "if it uses ActivityPub, we want to communicate with it*". with obvious exclusions for spam etc.

  • but the fediverse is equally suited to federated islands as to one fediverse, right? Most people will want the full fediverse but people can also create their separate spaces if desired.

    I guess, yeah, but it has tradeoffs. Each island loses even more diversity of perspective (e.g., political echo-chamber, or building fedi tools that might work well for their island but make no sense for other islands), and making it harder to use as replacements for Xitter / reddit etc.

    Like, a lot of discussion happens on topics like "how can we make Mastodon better for former Xitter users?" or the same thing but for lemmy and reddit. Maybe they're fundamentally not the right questions to ask if the endgame state of federated social media is that it isn't a direct replacement of centralized services.

  • Videos @lemmy.world

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    Australia @aussie.zone

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    Australia @aussie.zone

    The loyalty tax shoppers willingly pay despite push for supermarket competition

    Melbourne @aussie.zone

    Victoria plans protest crackdown in bid to boost social cohesion

    Australia @aussie.zone

    'Silent killer' heatwave in 2009 a deadly wake-up call for Australia

    Fediverse @lemmy.world

    How to buy shoes in the fediverse

    Technology @beehaw.org

    Against the dark forest

    Melbourne @aussie.zone

    Beyond The Valley revealed as Victoria's first pill testing site. Here's how it will work

    Videos @lemmy.world

    I dare you to trick or treat here. | Wizards with Guns

    Australia @aussie.zone

    A box of Cadbury's Favourites reveals a lot about the 'high-low' cycles of supermarket pricing

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    xkcd 2999 - Bad Map Projection: The United Stralia

    Fediverse @lemmy.world

    Firefish is entering maintenance mode

    Australia @aussie.zone

    Best Australian books of the 21st century: as chosen by 50 experts

    Melbourne @aussie.zone

    Melbourne shortlisted among seven potential host cities for the 2030 Gay Games

    Melbourne @aussie.zone

    Melbourne is growing fast, but on the fringes, public transport isn't

    Games @lemmy.world

    Doom and Doom II get a ‘definitive’ rerelease that’s packed with upgrades

    Australia @aussie.zone

    Queensland’s premier wants publicly owned petrol stations – is that a good idea?