True, but seeing how politicians have been adopting these kinds of grifts is quite interesting. Also the fact that VC's are doing pump and dumps now was something I didn't expect (not because of the ethics, it's VC afterall, but because I expected it would cause more legal issues).
It's also interesting to see how little legal repercussions there are for these kind of schemes and how that even those are disappearing. Overall it's just fascinating seeing the crypto grift "industry" evolve.
There is a Firefox extension that does automatically (although it seems to be a bit unreliable). Maybe someone can extract that part into a library and make a not with it.
I have to use Windows at work and I feel like a boomer since I haven't used it since I was 14/15. I'm constantly looking up the most basic shit like how to overlay calendars in Outlook or change the orientation of a single page in Word.
Lemmy has also taken over advertiser focused moderation patterns. A great example is NSFW. What is NSFW exactly? Not safe for work? Why is only that relevant?
NSFW is just used to mark advertiser unfriendly content. Why else group nakedness, violence, sexual content, and death in the same category?
It's way too vague to be useful, you have no idea if you're going to see a nipple or a murder.
Content warnings like on Mastodon are better, but don't provide a way to reliably filter out categories. I personally think it would be way better to have specific nested tags for certain types of material.
Yes, but on which instance? Lemmy.ml is not controversy free and Lemmy.world already hosts like 50% of Lemmy alone. I think the only viable option that everyone could agree on would be another instance, but that would just leave us with 3 communities.
I really like the first one