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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/)NY
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2
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1,155
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2 yr. ago

  • Because 99% of the time, the simplest solution is the best one, and the simplest solution never involves blockchain in any capacity. In this case, the simplest solution involves money. Currency exists for a reason, whether you like it or not.

    Also, for real-world use, not being able to alter information in the system is a bug, not a feature, because it prevents the correction of mistakes. And there will always be mistakes, because humans.

  • I suspect this is going to pull in two directions.

    On the one hand, people are already developing some level of warning label fatigue, where they skim over the labels without registering the content just like they do on-line ads. (Both practices are doubtless known to cause cancer in California.)

    On the other hand, there's a type of personality who may, in fact, change their minds about buying if presented with a short, sharp "this is bad for you" reminder on the way to the checkout.

    Putting the labels on is, overall, a harmless experiment to try, so we might as well see if it does any good. Personally, I don't think we're going to see much change until we spend a couple of decades broadcasting and reinforcing the "no amount is safe" message, and even then many people will keep drinking. Just as there are still smokers today, even after many decades of "you will die horribly if you do this" messaging.

  • Not in the way you're hoping for. Proton is a wine offshoot, which means it's exclusive to x86 and x86_64 arches. You could perhaps get it to run by installing qemu and setting it up to run x86_64 binaries, but even if that worked you'd likely end up with single-digit FPS in most games.

    Based on what Gentoo currently has keyworded, you should be able to get a solid useful desktop—KDE or Gnome (or sway, if that's your preference), Firefox, Libreoffice, Gimp, VLC, and other popular basics—but I wouldn't expect games or other proprietary software for a while yet, if ever.

  • One problem with your idea is, what constitutes a "work" for the purpose of renewing copyright? Currently, a single photograph and a two-hour movie that cost $$$ to make are both "works". Charging $5000 to renew the copyright on an individual photo will bankrupt people who make a living doing stock photography, but it's peanuts for a large movie studio. You could create a category of "small works", like individual photographs or short stories, that can be batched together so that you pay only one fee to renew a group of them, but flat-fee-per-work under the current definition will cause problems for some classes of individual creators.

    Personally, I think we need to tear the whole thing down and start over. Base copyright on individual works on a "use it or lose it" system—as long as copies of a work remain available for purchase (not rental—streaming or DRM-gated access is not sufficient) from the copyright holder at a reasonable price, they have exclusive rights to it. Stop publishing the work, and it lands in the public domain within 5-10 years. This needs to be accompanied by substantial reforms on how derivative works and trademarked characters are handled—we need a universal mechanical licensing system with a central clearinghouse that allows anyone to create a derivative work for a flat fee or percentage of revenue, and an official, legally-binding system for indicating "this derivative work was not created by the trademark holder". (Figuring out how rights on unpublished works function in this schema is something I still need to work through, but they're not a major concern for 99% of people.)

  • Number of downloads ≠ number of users. People with multiple devices, people who replace devices, and people who have to wipe and reprovision borked devices all inflate the number. I'd guess that, over the period that total has been running, we're looking at 4-5 downloads per user, if not more. Still a ridiculous number, but not that ridiculous.

  • New film plot: the airport's facial recognition system can't tell the difference between the intended copilot and their identical twin, a terrorist. Question is, is it a comedy about bureaucracy or an edge-of-your-seat thriller?

  • Fictional ones don't have to be cheap to manufacture in the real world. The weirdest things can add to costs when you have to take into account the constraints of injection molding and press-fit assemblies (and that's just for the outer shell).

  • Assuming that the police report is always wrong is just as bad as assuming that it's always right. I don't think there's any question in this case that the suspect was committing arson—the presence or absence of fire damage would have been hard to hide from the public. Arson is a pretty serious crime that might have endangered innocent bystanders if the fires had spread sufficiently. Was he really brandishing a machete at the police? I can't say for sure, but it isn't implausible. Was the force used to bring him in disproportionate? Maybe, but I find it difficult to believe that anyone was aiming at this guy's testicles on purpose. They're just not a very good target.

    This isn't like the cases of someone being seriously injured or killed during a "wellness check" or for standing on a street corner while Indigenous. In the absence of any other information, I'd say that the injuries that the suspect suffered here really weren't intentional and a misaimed plastic bullet ricocheted into his crotch. If you want a flagship case for demonstrating police brutality to the public, I wouldn't pick this one.

  • Not much mystery here: something went very wrong, the dude's body ended up somewhere it's going to be difficult to find (possibly in the river), and the dog wasn't used to being alone in the wilderness and was traumatized, assuming it really is the same dog. It isn't unusual for the body of someone who dies in the wilderness to take months or years to find, even with intense searching, unfortunately.