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2 yr. ago

  • Let me turn that right around on you: What are your sources that dispute the Gazan numbers? I find it hard to believe that anyone is in a better position to count casualties than the body running the hospitals in the affected region.

    Of course the numbers from all sides always need to be taken with a grain of salt, but GHM numbers are generally trusted by the UN, US government and media, and have been found to be accurate in numerous Western (aka Israel-friendly) studies. I don't know how much more you want.

  • there are mass deaths in a war

    What is happening in Gaza right now is abnormal by so many metrics, including % of children killed, % of civilians, and number of reporters. It's far from normal even in context of the more chaotic wars in history. Stop trying to normalize it.

    If Hamas surrendered themselves the war would end.

    Do you really think that after Israel just brutally murdered thousands of innocent young people's families, they're going to want peace? What Israel is doing right now is making sure that there's going to be a fresh wave of "terrorists" down the line. If you actually want lasting peace, what is going on right now makes absolutely no sense

  • From a privacy POV, sure, not trying to argue that. Just saying that Telegram does have a bunch of features like that that wouldn't really work if all chats were always E2E encrypted, so there's a reason that it's opt-in. Whether it's a good one or not is up to you to decide for yourself.

    Though I definitely think that Telegram could do a much better job explaining the trade-off, especially in a world where many major messengers are always e2e encrypted, and people somewhat expect it to be the default.

  • Correct me if I'm wrong, but even with double ratchet, retrieving and decrypting the message history is tricky / impossible, no? Afaik signal does allow you to receive new messages on multiple "linked devices", but a new linked device doesn't have access to any messaging history.

  • Tbf not all the chats being E2E encrypted is a UX compromise. It makes Telegram a lot nicer to use across devices and allows just accessing your messages from anywhere without needing your phone to be on. Plus no need to back up chats etc. because they're all just on the server. As opposed to secret chats, which of course are bound to one particular device and can only be accessed from there.

    I'm all for E2E by default but I must say I actually like the idea of having a choice in this particular case.

  • Yeah for sure everything you say makes sense, but at the same time there is a definite lack of software that makes use of all that power for a broader range of professionals.

    Personally, I'd love to replace my aging MacBook with a small and light iPad Pro that I can also use for convenient note taking on the go, but the problem is a complete lack of a (viable) software development stack, and that's despite IDEs like VSCode being web-based and with that theoretically capable of running on iOS. I know some of my friends are in the same situation; one of them relies on Blender, the other on Ableton.

    The inability of running two instances of Word / Excel etc. may very well be Microsoft's fault, but that doesn't change the fact that as a user you can't do it.

    In theory I guess a Surface is exactly what I'm looking for, but switching to Windows would be a bit of a hard pill to swallow. Which is why I'm left wishing that Apple would offer some kind of hybrid tablet / laptop device like the Surface, capable of running full desktop apps and full desktop-style multitasking. I understand that that's "not the vision" or whatever, but it creates an awkward situation where the hardware of this lineup is more than adequate but the viability of the device as a whole is limited by software.

  • It's a really good point though, it is a bit of an odd device with all that power and the significant limitations in software. Yeah it's marked at artists, but if you're talking about drawing with pen input, it's actually pretty overpowered. There's Logic Pro and Final Cut Pro but they benefit a lot less from a touch screen, and there's a bunch of workflow issues due to iOS' lack of a file system.

    I really wish Apple would add some kind of "windowed mode" like Samsung Dex or the Surface Tablets. A $2.5k super high-powered device that can't even open two Excel sheets side by side is quite strange.

  • I guess I don’t really expect a company to resist pressure from government agencies on my behalf.

    Personally, I expect them to resist to the extent possible by law. The cops need to follow a lot of rules to make legally binding requests for data. I understand that if they do, there's not much a company can do other than hand out the info, but if there's a legal way to deny such a request, I expect the company to pursue it.

  • Sure, I'm not saying debt should be the only factor.

    The risk of doing something can't be a factor. Having done something should

    I think that's a very narrow view. Of course risks matter and should be considered when choosing a candidate. In fact, if a candidate has not yet been president before, all you can do is to assess what they might do once they are.

  • The typical range of human scale temperatures is like -10 to 40 degrees on the Celsius scale? Makes no sense.

    But it makes so much sense though. Because it's anchored around the freezing and boiling points of water, which is a universal experience we can all relate to. 0°C outside? It's freezing.

    Fahrenheit as "the human scale" is what makes no fucking sense. You end up with the same exact problem where your specific range of "human scale temperatures" does not line up with 0-100°F at all. But it's also not anchored to water's behavior. So it just ends up being arbitrary.

  • It's not that simple though. VPN providers in most cases have been externally audited not to store any logs of user activity, meaning they couldn't comply with government requests of this nature. Generally, their entire legitimacy as companies depends on trust, meaning they have much stronger incentives to actually keep user data private than an ISP does. Of course I agree that using a VPN is no privacy silver bullet, but it's not like they have zero privacy benefits either.