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6 yr. ago

  • People commenting on the internet from thousands of KMs away in their room: "this is not enough, they should have done more". It makes you feel good, because you are making a moral point about the insufficient morality of others. It makes you feel better than them.

  • Never punish somebody for taking a political step in the right direction. This is not about you feeling good but it's about them building change. We can argue if change is possible within Israel's society, but it's not on the people who decided to do something.

  • Technology @lemmy.world

    Content moderators are organizing against Big Tech

    Technology @lemmy.ml

    Content moderators are organizing against Big Tech

  • DEI is definitely used in corporate environments. I understand this use of the term as "rightswashing", where the corporate performs inclusivity without actually doing anything about it.

  • Technology @lemmy.world

    Exposing Zalando

    Technology @beehaw.org

    Google’s DeepMind UK team reportedly seeks to unionize | TechCrunch

    Technology @lemmy.world

    Google’s DeepMind UK team reportedly seeks to unionize | TechCrunch

    Technology @lemmy.ml

    Google’s DeepMind UK team reportedly seeks to unionize | TechCrunch

  • Its impossible for the consciouss mind to not experience anything

    Lot of people would disagree on this. A lot of spiritual practices are exactly about experiencing the non-experience, experience what cannot be described, explained or thought. If you're lazy, a big enough of an LSD dose will bring you there in a couple of hours.

  • Technology @beehaw.org

    I’ve Worked at Google for Decades. I’m Sickened by What It’s Doing.

    Technology @lemmy.ml

    I’ve Worked at Google for Decades. I’m Sickened by What It’s Doing.

  • I followed a similar trajectory, leaving the tech sector to pursue politically-motivated jobs. Am I locked-in? Probably, my linkedin is full of agitprop. Do I care? No, the world is on fire, there's no coming back. I get to the end of the month, I'm doing important stuff, fuck careers, there are more important things.

    The person I know that got fired is even more gung-ho than me so I can imagine they don't care either.

  • From what I know, no. It's full of more politically-aligned workplaces, like NGOs and research groups, that crave politically-motivated people with tech skills. I know personally one of the fired workers that went on to do a PhD right after being fired.

  • Technology @lemmy.world

    Does My Code Kill Palestinians?

    Technology @lemmy.world

    Ericsson Tunisia workers win landmark deal in union-led victory for labor rights – The North Africa Post

    Technology @lemmy.ml

    Ericsson Tunisia workers win landmark deal in union-led victory for labor rights – The North Africa Post

    Technology @lemmy.world

    ‘An Overwhelmingly Negative And Demoralizing Force’: What It’s Like Working For A Company That’s Forcing AI On Its Developers - Aftermath

    Technology @lemmy.ml

    ‘An Overwhelmingly Negative And Demoralizing Force’: What It’s Like Working For A Company That’s Forcing AI On Its Developers - Aftermath

    Technology @lemmy.world

    Hundreds of Video Game Workers Join New Union as Trump Attacks Labor Rights

    Technology @lemmy.ml

    Hundreds of Video Game Workers Join New Union as Trump Attacks Labor Rights

    Technology @lemmy.world

    ZeniMax union "overwhelming" votes to authorise strike if Microsoft contract negotiations break down

    Technology @lemmy.ml

    ZeniMax union "overwhelming" votes to authorise strike if Microsoft contract negotiations break down

    Technology @lemmy.world

    TWC 101 - Onboarding Call

  • I don't know what understanding you have of this topic, but historically and presently, the Free Software movement and the Open Source movement are ideological opposites, with the latter spawning off of the first to accomodate pro-corporate, pro-capitalist positions.

    Both of these are also different from the totality of entities proposing "open source licensing", which is a much broader set.

    Then nowadays the Free Software Movement lost its momentum and it has been subsumed into the idea of "FOSS", but still, it should be treated as its own, dinstinct entity.

    As for the genocide per default part: Its nonsense to believe that if open source didnt exist or was different that it would somehow lead to less genocide.

    Open source is just a technical and legal reflection of a world and a time where Imperial venture capital benefited from the free flow of information. I think the author would agree that, if open source didn't exist, something else would have enabled similar or different forms of Imperial oppression, including genocide. Same for the start-up ecosystem, digital capital taking over the financial economy and Western democracies and so on. Open Source enabled that? For sure. But if we want to play "what if", any serious materialist analysis would conclude that Open Source was just a tool for digital capital to express itself and exploit workers. A tool that could have been replaced by something else.

  • the article doesn't mention the Free Software Movement even once.

    Also the article is making a point that you don't need to side for genocide to enable a genocide. That's the whole point.

  • Technology @lemmy.world

    On Evils in Software Licensing

    Technology @lemmy.world

    4-day work-week pilot due in tech land by early summer

  • you clearly have no clue what you're talking about. The federal funding goes to Weizenbaum Institute, that is another very big institution in techno politics and other fields of research. You keep googling shit up.

  • funneling of grants towards her dubious work at TUB

    Bro, don't just google shit about scholars you have no clue about and make up fake accusations. She's not doing research at TU Berlin, she's just a lecturer there. She's one of the most famous scholars in this field and she's associated more strongly with DAIR, which is a thousand times more relevant in this discourse than TU, and DiPLab in Paris.

    You clearly just googled her name, checked where she works, and made up some shit.

  • I'm talking about a private individual invading the physical and digital spaces of public institutions with the president providing political cover and stopping other parts of the state to intervene. That's a self-coup. Nothing like that happened in Italy and so far the government is operating within legality.

  • No self-coup happened yet, most constitutional freedoms are still respected, there are no political extra-judicial arrests (or at least not that many). Except for some repression of communitarian spaces and public protests, it is not sensibly different from any center/center-right neoliberal government.

  • Both questions would deserve a book each to really answer, but I will try.

    How are you defining mass parties? Relatively large participatory base, strategy decided democratically, presence on the local territory and ties with communities. Here though I was more framing them as "parties designed for a mass society", where their strategy relies on the possibility to reduce the individual to mass, as in the case of workers parties. A one-size-fits-all organization, where one strategy, one identity and one theory of change is shared by millions of people.

    When did they stop working, and why?

    There are at least two big elements: the first is the end of mass society. Once we became all individuals, the mechanism of identification in a collective entity became harder. It got even harder over time, when most young people have no examples or memory of anybody around them ever acting collectively.

    The second element is informational: mass parties are incredibly slow. The analysis-synthesis-action-assessment most ML parties are based on is predicated on the assumption that the social and political phenomena you're working with don't change too fast and between the analysis phase and the action phase, the underlying phenomenon is relatively stable. If the analysis is too slow or the phenomenon (i.e. specific industries, specific political landscapes, etc etc) change too fast, your analysis is always late. Correct, but useless. This renders anybody involved in such ecosystems (not just mass parties), very aware of the motivations of their own failure, but completely incapable of escaping them.