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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)BO
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2 yr. ago

  • We used to go out for drinks after work once or twice a week

    Then a guy got so drunk he puked at the bar, got in a fight with another guy and bit his ear off

    The guy was immediately fired obviously but we don't socialize like we used to for some reason

  • Advance Publications https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advance_Publications

    Advance Publications, Inc. is a privately held American media company owned by the families of Donald Newhouse and Samuel Irving Newhouse Jr., the sons of company founder Samuel Irving Newhouse Sr. It owns publishing-relating companies including American City Business Journals, MLive Media Group, and Condé Nast, and is a major shareholder in Charter Communications (13% ownership), Reddit (42 million shares), and Warner Bros. Discovery (8% ownership.)

    Potato, potato

  • Reddit is owned and controlled by a corporation (Condé Nast.) They disabled 3rd party Reddit apps to force people onto the official Reddit app which also broke many third party moderation tools. This disproportionately impacted power users, frequent posters, and mods-- in other words, the people who made Reddit the important community it was.

    They showed an unwillingness to listen to their community or work with the unpaid volunteer moderators, instead banning the moderators who took part in the Reddit Blackout and replacing them with mods willing to cooperate with the enshittification of the site.

    They've been mangling the web interface to be uglier and less usable (old.reddit.com is still up, but the mobile version of old.reddit.com is gone). They've been experimenting with ways to show more ads and subtler ads.

    Lemmy is open source and federated so it can't get bought up by a company and cored out for shareholder value. You can use different instances, or a variety of apps. You can use (or create your own) third party tools for accessibility and moderation.

    Lemmy is currently a smaller universe than Reddit was, but it has a high ratio of good posters and moderators who care personally about their own communities, so hopefully it continues to grow.

  • It's just that the logical conclusion here is that everybody skips work/class/get-togethers/volunteering on days any individual is sick or has problems, and therefore effectively nobody can ever do any work or receive any benefits from any work or community activity of any kind. At some point some things have to start on time, right? From surgeons to airline pilots to garbage collectors to graduate classes to stamp collecting clubs to backyard BBQs, delaying everything until everyone can do everything at the same time just doesnt seem like it would work

  • Wow, hmmm. I'm someone who makes personal sacrifices in the name of punctuality because I've experienced the negative effects of lateness and strive not to externalize those costs to others whenever I can.

    I'm going to be thinking about this post for a while because I really want to appreciate and relate to this perspective, because my personal inclinations go: food gets cold and won't be as good reheated as it was when it was hot the first time. Other people might have woken early or skipped a meal or made other personal sacrifices to be somewhere on time. I see punctuality as a responsibility to my fellow humans. If I say I'll be somewhere at a certain time, I do my best to do keep my word. So it's going to take me a while to really process the alternative perspective here.

  • The difference between referring to "

    <discussion-relevant adjective>

    people"and referring to people as "

    <an adjective used as a noun>

    " is one of those things you can't unhear once you start hearing it, too. It reduces people to a particular facet as though it's the only thing that matters about them.

    When somebody says something like "the thing about blacks is..." or "I work with a bipolar, he always..." it makes one clench: the thing about to be said is definitely going to be ignorant and possibly hurtful or bigoted. Just say "

    <adjective>

    people" or "people with

    <condition>

    " if you don't want people to automatically assume that you view people only as what you perceive as their most important attribute.

  • I saw a video the other day explaining why he always brings up Hannibal Lecter seemingly out of the blue when discussing immigration, and this confirms the hypothesis: Trump does not understand that political asylum means something different than insane asylum