The problem with that, is that if you include everything "small" in the definition, the word loses all it's meaning, feeble as it is already.
The word microplastic was introduced to describe not just any small piece of trash, but specifically that very small, invisible, pieces of plastics that are, as it turned out, everywhere, in the air, in the water, in our food, in our blood, even in space. If you add just small pieces of rubbish to it, we remove all the sense from the word, and will need another one.
That's the neat thing: nobody can. It's incredibly hard to devise a study that can show anything about it. There is no way to get a human without microplastics in them to get a control group, and by this point as far as I know there is no plausible theory to get a specific study.
Everyone kinda suspects that it can't be good for you, simultaneously there is zero actual evidence that something is ever happening. We don't know, and that's very frustrating.
That's where your line is. Mine is way further away, past nazis, past wipes with photos of dead people, past unlimited autogenerated ads for cryptoscams.
We both have a line, we both have internet to be community moderated to our ideal. You're not a champion of free speech just because your ideal community includes wipes with nazi shit.
D-pad for me, functionally, is a 4 directional buttons clustered together, oriented along the X-Y axis. To conserve parts, it's quite often made not as 4 buttons but as a combined shifter, because you realistically wouldn't be pressing the opposite buttons at the same time.
The left track area on the steam controller is that. The buttons are fuzed together (which is normal for D-pad) and big and harder to tell apart (which is less normal)
Now that you reintroduced moderators, your totally unmoderated utopia of frozen peaches looks more and more like "moderators should only remove what I want them to remove and leave what I want them to leave"
Also, "Aside from the CP" doesn't exist. In your unmoderated utopia you can't just put this aside as if it doesn't exist, you have to deal with it. Or be OK with it, like you're OK with everything else.
You know why it wasn't like that everywhere? Because some places had good moderation. It was like that since the days of FIDO. If there was a good community, it was good because they didn't allow bad shit to exist in their community.
If you think spez invented moderators to sell you coca cola, or whatever, you either don't know how shit works, or do and just secretly want to wipe treads with guro.
Yes, we do actually. Not zero, unfortunately, those fuckers are like mold, always returning for some reason. Like, the second they decreased moderation on X The Everything App Formerly Known As Twitter, it got overrun with Nazis.
Nope, no you wouldn't. If you want to see the example of unmoderated community, go to whatever new 4chan incarnation is. You will see child pornography, nazis recruiting children with badly fried memes, dead people, parts of dead people, characters from popular japaneese cartons involved in the depraved shit, and spam, so much spam, so much spam you couldn't even believe this much spam is possible.
Cops use devices to pretend to be a celltower, so your phone connects to it, and then they use it to spy on you. Rayhunter looks for this behaviour and warns you if it detects a suspicious tower that behaves like cops pretending to be a tower.
I just bought the last thing I wanted from them and finally moved to their infrastructure. Like, yesterday. Welp, I hope I don't have to change anything ever again.
I don't think it's better. It's a different way to achieve that, but there is nothing inherently bad with whatever appliance that can do more than one thing. We shouldn't expect the makers to be satisfied with the shitty job at programming damn things however.
I do want all my appliances to have wireless connection, I do want to talk to my kettle and set my oven temp on my phone.
https://discuss.tchncs.de/comment/19641123