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966
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • Private against who?

    Privacy communities need to really drill in the idea of threat models instead of pretending privacy is some linear scale and the ultimate goal is to bury your phone and computer in a lead-lined concrete block underground. Privacy and security are meaningless concepts unless you know who your are protecting it from and what their capabilities might be. I don't need to hide from NSA Tailored Access Operations because I'm not trying to x the y of the USA. I do need to protect myself from basic scam attackers, copyright trolls and neo-nazi stalkers. And Matrix, along with certain basic opsec guidelines, does that and more for me.

  • Anyone who doesn't know how to (safely!) pirate books, articles, films, games and software, please read, use and share the resources over at !piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com

    This skill is increasingly useful.

  • What the fuck is a right-winger doing in a neoliberal cabinet?

    I don't understand what's surprising about that. I'd expect most people in a neoliberal cabinet to be right-wing.

  • Headlines are being headlines, I get it, but Fry was repeating a joke:

    “I heard a very good joke yesterday,” the QI host, 67, told Stig Abell on Times Radio on Thursday.

    “Someone said, ‘Musk is not a Nazi... Nazis made really good cars,’” he went on, before bursting out laughing.

  • Maybe we should read it.

    (I have and it's short, simple, empowering and to the point, would recommend)

  • Firefox is the best browser

    It's only real competitors, in my eyes, are Firefox forks.

  • You wouldn’t, because you are (presumably) knowledgeable about the current AI trend and somewhat aware of political biases of the creators of these products.

    Well, more because I'm knowledgeable enough about machine learning to know it's only as good as its dataset, and knowledgeable enough about mass media and the internet to know how atrocious 'common sense' often is. But yes, you're right about me speaking from a level of familiarity which I shouldn't consider typical.

    People have been strangely trusting of chat bots since ELIZA in the 1960s. My country is lucky enough to teach a small amount of bias and media literacy skills through education and some of the state broadcaster's programs (it's not how it sounds, I swear!), and when I look over to places like large chunks of the US, I'm reminded that basic media literacy isn't even very common, let alone universal.

  • Well, it would require more than just legislation change. Truth be told, in the US, a working democracy requires some form of revolution since the people holding all the power benefit from the broken system. But on the other hand, organizations and communities (including territories of hundreds of thousands) practicing direct democracy on a smaller scale have seen success with these strategies.

  • Try buying Monero, it is very hard to buy.

    • Acquire BTC (there are even ATMs for this in many countries)
    • Trade for XMR using one of the many non-KYC services like WizardSwap or exch

    I haven't looked into whether that's illegal in some jurisdictions but it's really really easy, once you know that's an option.

    Or you could even just trade directly with anyone who owns XMR. Obviously easier for some people than others but it's a real option.

    Both of these methods don't even require personal details like ID/name/phone number.

  • How do you solve the problem that half the country can’t even be bothered to participate once every four years?

    I assume you're talking about the US electoral system?? That's very different.

    but how would we get people to engage with such a system?

    By empowering them.

    Consider how the current electoral system disempowers people:

    1. Some people literally cannot vote or risk jeopardizing their job taking the day off, others face voter suppression tactics
    2. The FPTP system (esp. spoiler effect) and the present political circumstances mean that there are really only two viable options for political parties for most people, so many feel that neither option represents them, let alone their individual positions on policy
    3. Politics is widely considered to be corrupt and break electoral promises regularly. There is little faith in either party to represent voters

    But, in a system where you are able to represent yourself at will, engagement is actually rewarding and meaningful. It won't magically make everyone care, but direct democracy alongside voter rights reform would likely make more people think it's worth polling.

  • No it doesn't. It requires imperialism. The genocides are simply efficient for the imperial machine creating settlements, but it's not a requirement. They're evidently avoidable and capitalists just repeatedly decide not to avoid it because they consider it cheaper to commit genocide rather than integrate more passively.

  • For what it's worth, I wouldn't ask any chatbot about politics at all.

  • JPEG-XL (someone already mentioned it as .jxl below) image files.

    • competitive with AVIF compression levels
    • not recycling video compression, so you get benefits like progressive loading
    • JPEG transcoding - can take existing JPEG files (so much of the existing images online) and shrink their size by ~20% with literally no change to the presented image, and this is easily reverable. The amount of data this would shrink without risk of altering the data is HUGE.

    There are a ton of other benefits but those are the three I'm most excited about.

  • I don't know specifically about Mastercard and Visa, or other jurisdictions, but I recall in my country that financial institutions have responsibility too. Finance is a major part of child exploitation just like it is with other organized crime, and they have a decent amount of power to analyze and flag suspicious finance networks, and governments benefit from compelling them to look into money instead of simply accepting it.

  • Lots of the people involved in CSAM are stupider than you might think, surprisingly bad at privacy/security given that almost everyone including governments hates them.

  • For what it's worth, I don't understand why anyone needs any linkedin.

  • (also pinging @Cowbee@lemmy.ml)

    Sometimes*, it's still worth replying to bad faith 'debate', not to discuss or even necessarily refute them, but to address their audience, including lurkers.

    That said, it's also good to have FAQs and links so you don't waste 30 minutes of your labor replying to a downvoted sunken bad faith one-liner.

  • Yep, deportations and plans for deportations, including the Madagascar Plan.

    Neo-Nazis often lie (yes, knowingly lie) and say they just want a group deported 'back to their own land'. It's a much easier pill to swallow for the group of racists and nationalists who think genocide is a step too far, and it acts to sanewash them, but at the end of the day it's cheaper and simpler to exterminate like the Nazi Regime did. Plus, there are groups who don't have an external indigenous land, like the trade unionists, gays, trans, communists, liberals, people with disabilities, [...] and so it's clear that they can't just deport and imprison all the ones they don't like. It always ends the same way with fascism.

  • I instance-hopped a couple of times because I joined smaller instances (the recommendation everyone gives you) that then disappeared / were abandoned by the admin.

    I already had this problem on PeerTube years earlier, so I played it safe with a bigger instance, at least for a main account (I also had one on gtio.io which was gone before the reddit API exodus). This is absolutely a real issue with people recommending small instances, but at the same time, it's necessary to avoid recommending just one which gets overwhelmed and disables new accounts.

  • I joined lemmy through a link my relative sent me and somehow I did not get to select an instance, it seemingly auto-assigned me to lemmy.cafe.

    Like spujb said, my guess is the link was directly to lemmy.cafe.

    If you want to quickly browse around different instances, there's https://join-lemmy.org/, which some people have said they avoided because they don't want people joining the politically-stricter instances as a first impression. So I'd recommend settling in for a week on .cafe to get an idea of how this works, before considering if you're having no problems with .cafe or if you'd like to explore other options. For example, if they have blocked any communities on other instances which you're interested in (I don't know if this is the case).