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World News @lemmy.world

No more 'made-in-China' in the U.S.? It's headed that way, Chinese exporters say

  • The iPhone was the first smartphone that hot insanely popular. It launched the app store model that's now used on every mobile platform including Android. Those apps have gotten hundreds of millions of people out of poverty in India and China who are doing e-commerce and opening small businesses from their phones. That's food on the table for the working class. They can earn money while looking after their children because they're not chained to a desktop computer for internet access. People in remote areas can know instantly about natural disasters and the news, educating them and making them active citizens in a democracy.

    People across the world can chat with each other for nearly free using messaging and social media apps, and won't have to send letters or pay extra fees for long-distance calls. The iPhone got more people onto what formerly only Blackberry-owning business executive had.

    It's such a first world thing to belittle the impact of smartphone (an industry which the iPhone shaped tremendously), when it has so much tangible impact, especially to working people.

  • World News @lemmy.world

    Trump aid cut imperils water scheme in scorching Jacobabad

    World News @lemmy.world

    Off air: one by one, the Taliban are removing women’s voices from Afghan radio

    World News @lemmy.world

    Germany warns of Russian disinformation targeting election

    World News @lemmy.world

    Hamas says it is investigating possible error over hostage body

  • The article in fact says this:

    Hamas has said all four were killed in Israeli airstrikes while Israel had previously said it had ”grave concern” for the lives of the Bibas family.

    Nowhere in the headline does it say who or what killed them, so you were never misled. It is you yourself who added new meaning to the headline by asserting without basis that it suggests Hamas was responsible. And you ended up having a strong emotional reaction to that meaning you invented.

    If you have read the article past the headline before engaging in ad hominem, you would've known that the writer makes clear who said what on the responsibility for the deaths.

  • World News @lemmy.world

    Israel confirms four dead hostages who will be returned from Gaza include young family

    Technology @lemmy.world

    Huawei's tri-foldable phone hits global markets in a show of defiance amid US curbs

    World News @lemmy.world

    Japan: Man jailed for attempted murder of former PM Fumio Kishida

    World News @lemmy.world

    'Real life Squid Game': Kim Sae-ron's death exposes Korea's celebrity culture

  • See, this falls apart when there's another instance that focuses on solarpunk. When some communities on that instance become more popular and active than the communities in your local instance, you'd want to be subscribed to the solar punk communities on that new instance too. Now, your local feed is only showing you solarpunk communities hosted on slrpnk.net but not solarpunk communities on other instances. This distinction is not meaningful because where a community is hosted can be totally detached from the content. The users you know by handle can also be very active, if not more active, on other instances talking about solarpunk than slrpnk.net.

  • I agree there's intention to present optimism and humanism in the face of conflict, but I find the execution to be lackluster. An example that comes to mind is Pike objecting to using mines in season 2 of DIS. He raises the issue directly to Cornwell, saying it's against Federation values. Then for some reason, the discussion becomes finding out why the Enterprise was diverted away from the Klingon war and ends praising Pike being "the best of Starfleet." The entire discussion about using unethical weaponry during wartime is sidetracked and left unresolved. The mines are still there on the station, and the responsibility of Starfleet Command for not taking down those Klingon mines is not explored.

    Another example is the explanation of the Burn. From interviews I've seen, the intention behind the crying Kelpien is to highlight the need to understand and sympathize with people vastly different from you even when the universe is as vast with warp travel impossible. The resolution is Burnham and Saru finding this Kelpien and help him understand his visions and thoughts, calm him down, and make warping safe again. But this Kelpien lacks characterization from the beginning. The audience doesn't know him that well, and we don't know why we should sympathize with his personal resolution. It would be much stronger if the cause of the Burn is the Emerald Syndicate, which we have established as a hostile force against the Federation. And we know they have good cause to be suspicious of the Federation from Osyraa's meeting with Vance. In the show, despite this message of reaching out to the vastly different, the Federation and the Chain never understood each other and resorted to using force. Another good candidate for the cause of the Burn is Ni'Var, which has its reasonable suspicions of the Federation at the time.

  • Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    "Star Trek is dying." How would you sell it to a younger audience?

    World News @lemmy.world

    African leaders call for direct talks with rebels to resolve Congo conflict

    World News @lemmy.world

    EU far-right parties rally in Madrid behind slogan 'Make Europe Great Again'

    World News @lemmy.world

    Thai Gaza hostages: Freed men arrive home to tears of joy in Bangkok

    World News @lemmy.world

    Taiwan economics officials to meet with Trump's team to avoid 100% tariff on chips

    • Google Image Search removing the ability to go directly to the raw image after Getty complained that web users are bypassing its website and therefore not generating traffic
    • Facebook removing chronological feed
    • Facebook showing you pages that you never followed on your home feed without the ability to turn this off
    • Microsoft trying to introduce ads to Explorer and the start menu
    • Microsoft making it difficult to create a local Windows account by making the process unintuitive, leading the user to believe that a Microsoft account is needed to use Windows
    • Apple dropping support for iOS web apps because it doesn't want to support browsers other than Safari
    • Reddit and Twitter's ban of third-party API use that killed nearly all third-party clients
    • EA producing games that require users to be always online, despite the game being single-player, presumably as a DRM measure
    • Ad companies making it easy for you to give consent to data sharing and selling but really difficult for you to opt-out

    Edit: More examples

  • News @lemmy.world

    Trump to create religious office in White House, target 'anti-Christian bias'

    Technology @lemmy.world

    Meet Eva, the AI chatbot based on a woman in prison

    News @lemmy.world

    Trump bans trans athletes in women's sports

    World News @lemmy.world

    Guatemala gives Rubio a second deportation deal for migrants being sent home from the US

    World News @lemmy.world

    S Jaishankar: India 'engaging with US' after shackled deportees spark anger

    World News @lemmy.world

    Trump says Israel would hand over Gaza after fighting, no US troops needed

  • That's not correct. This is the origin report under the Biden administration from the Intelligence Community. This is the summary:

    [...] the IC was able to reach broad agreement on several other key issues. We judge the virus was not developed as a biological weapon. Most agencies also assess with low confidence that SARS-CoV-2 probably was not genetically engineered; however, two agencies believe there was not sufficient evidence to make an assessment either way. Finally, the IC assesses China’s officials did not have foreknowledge of the virus before the initial outbreak of COVID-19 emerged.

    After examining all available intelligence reporting and other information, though, the IC remains divided on the most likely origin of COVID-19. All agencies assess that two hypotheses are plausible: natural exposure to an infected animal and a laboratory-associated incident.

    • Four IC elements and the National Intelligence Council assess with low confidence that the initial SARS-CoV-2 infection was most likely caused by natural exposure to an animal infected with it or a close progenitor virus—a virus that probably would be more than 99 percent similar to SARS-CoV-2. These analysts give weight to China’s officials’ lack of foreknowledge, the numerous vectors for natural exposure, and other factors.
    • One IC element assesses with moderate confidence that the first human infection with SARS-CoV-2 most likely was the result of a laboratory-associated incident, probably involving experimentation, animal handling, or sampling by the Wuhan Institute of Virology. These analysts give weight to the inherently risky nature of work on coronaviruses.
    • Analysts at three IC elements remain unable to coalesce around either explanation without additional information, with some analysts favoring natural origin, others a laboratory origin, and some seeing the hypotheses as equally likely.
    • Variations in analytic views largely stem from differences in how agencies weigh intelligence reporting and scientific publications and intelligence and scientific gaps.

    The IC judges they will be unable to provide a more definitive explanation for the origin of COVID-19 unless new information allows them to determine the specific pathway for initial natural contact with an animal or to determine that a laboratory in Wuhan was handling SARS-CoV-2 or a close progenitor virus before COVID-19 emerged.

  • The article doesn't say it's happening. This is from another source:

    Mao Xiangdong, vice-president of the Shanghai Institute of Technology and a member of the standing committee of the municipal people’s congress, proposed the idea during Shanghai’s ongoing legislative sessions, according to a post by China Development News, a newspaper under the National Development and Reform Commission.

    It is not clear when the post was put online but it was removed on Friday morning

    Source: https://www.scmp.com/news/china/politics/article/3295169/unplug-great-firewall-boost-chinas-competitiveness-shanghai-lawmaker-says

  • I had the same thought when NFTs became popular, but no longer. NFTs are artificial scarcity, since they have no inherent value and the uniqueness of each should therefore hold no inherent value. But the hype's gone now. Nobody cares about NFTs because everyone knows their value is artificial. I think that is what's gonna happen when replicators are invented. There will be brief periods of hype to create artificial scarcity, but they will pass.