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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 17th, 2023

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  • I agree, it seems like they’re doing everything they can to force users into the mindset of “you’re going to have to spend money here.”

    However… I don’t think that’s going to work. It’s a tactic that relies solely on Apple not allowing the user to customize their icons, which combines into a double whammy of “give me money to fix the thing that I broke.”

    Why do I have to pay when Android users don’t?

    Why is Reddit being greedy?

    This other site is free and doesn’t make me feel like I’m being taken advantage of every turn.

    Reddit is trying to capitalize on goodwill they already spent months ago. And the quality of the site is just going to get worse from here.









  • The only thing you can’t do with an open API is exploit every dollar of value that passes through your service.

    The main difference between a Silicon Valley API and a FOSS API, is the SV API is trying to get tons of people rich as fuck by exploiting you. The FOSS API can live long and prosper by simply asking for donations every once in a while, or engaging in very light-handed monetization.

    There are like a million little nuances to this whole issue, and the lack of nuance is what Silicon Valley relies on to convince people that they must pillage their users, but that’s the gist.




  • who care much more about whether what you said is polite than whether it’s actually a good thing to say.

    This is a great point. So much of the talk around equality is nothing more than pandering to gain social approval.

    And when you see people getting their entire careers ruined over saying the wrong thing once, or even something they said decades ago, it just drives people into the political margins.

    People are more interested in attacking their neighbors for “bigotry” than they are in building a more just society.

    I’m putting bigotry in quotes, because the words and ideas that are considered hateful are constantly changing. If someone doesn’t keep up with the latest fashion in acceptable speech, they may suddenly find themselves opposite to an angry mob.

    The social climate surrounding us is not an accident. The way people respond to their perceived political rivals is not an accident. It’s a result of how unprepared our society is in dealing with social media algorithms that promote engagement through division. And a result of bad actors capitalizing on that division to sow greater unrest.

    This isn’t new. The evidence has been on full display for years. And yet, the damage has been done. There’s simply no social appetite for those who support slow and steady (durable and stable) policy reform.

    The recent political climate on “sides” can be summed up with “You’re either 100% with us, no discussion, or you are our enemy” and that’s where true oppression begins.


  • TechnoBabble@lemmy.worldtoProgrammer Humor@lemmy.mlLMAO THEY GOT BUSTED
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    1 year ago

    This isn’t just a problem on the internet. I run into people in real life who think this way, often.

    How many times have comedians or other entertainers come under fire for jokes or other bits they’ve done? It’s a lot. Comedians will all tell you that they can’t perform in places like New York the same way anymore, because half the things they say get booed from the crowd.

    “Why should I care about Dave Chappelle, or anyone else, getting slammed for some offensive thing they said?”

    Because entertainer’s acts are one of the ways that people come to understand the world around them. Their satire is an important tool for democracy to unravel the bullshit that surrounds them. It’s supposed to be the opposite of sterile.

    And if “dirty language” means that you’re okay silencing those guys, along with everyone else, you are engaging in oppression on a far wider scale than you realize.



  • Isn’t karma just like an anti-spam mechanism that barely works?

    And you get karma just by posting whatever the community wants to hear. So it’s not like it shows how enlightened you are or anything.

    Anyway, one thing that bothered me about Reddit’s karma system, is that people would delete their comments if they got a few downvotes, even if they had something important to say.

    Here on Lemmy, you can quickly see both upvotes and downvotes. So if someone says something controversial due to politics or whatever, they’re less likely to delete their comment because they can see “ahh, I’m not just being mercilessly attacked, 50 people upvoted me.”

    That can be abused I guess, but I like that it promotes discussion that isn’t just echo-chamber nonsense. We’ll just have to see how it works in practice.


  • didn’t have anything like an emergency beacon

    It’s astonishing to me that they wouldn’t have an emergency beacon on a marine vessel that will kill it’s occupants if not unsealed in time.

    It’s not like a beacon would be that expensive.

    And why wasn’t there an independently powered ballast ditching system? Like an emergency button to quickly surface?

    With the known unsafe culture of the company, and these obvious oversights, it’s amazing this didn’t happen sooner.

    I wouldn’t even be surprised if the emergency air was somehow compromised in order to save a couple dollars.

    OceanGate is just as doomed as their CEO.