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Posts
3
Comments
683
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Ultimately your concerns stem from the philosophy of privacy, but you are weak on what practical privacy means. You have to give up a certain amount of privacy to participate in society at all. This is the case regardless of any technology. Once you decide you need a cell phone, you now have a tracking device on your person that can be used by anyone that wants to track you, specifically. You cannot prevent this regardless of what you do. Assuming you are not a person of interest for a nation-state, this exchange of privacy for convenience is rational.

    There are things you can do in-order to increase your privacy in any un-trusted network though. For example: MAC-address randomization. DNS Proxies, VPNs, Privacy focused Browsers block-lists no-script etc etc.

    Not all of these are relevant in all situations, and all of them can be made moot as soon as you login to some place. i.e. logging into a lemmy instance means that you now are uniquely identifiable and information can start being collected about you.

    Now the question of "trust." i.e. you don't "trust" your friends network? Why not? Any argument that you can make about not knowing their network applies 10-fold to the cell network that you have absolutely chosen to trust. So the measures that you take with your own device to protect it from the public phone network, are equally effective on any wireless network. And that is where privacy advocates start getting squirrely.

    tl;dr, if you have already taken the above steps, all untrusted networks should be treated the same according to your personal privacy envelope.

  • This is a great example of someone who has a lot of fear in their life that stems from ignorance, but tries to pass it off as something else. But make no mistake, you have a large gap in knowledge, and that knowledge gap combined with the paranoia of what you read from "privacy advocates" means your life is much harder and more insecure then you realize.

  • It's a systemic issue with Waymo and any all the taxi "disruptors." Choices are made to put people in danger in order to extract profit by using cars AT ALL that is the problem, not who or what is operating them. Technology jesus isn't going to save grandma.

  • As a senior Network engineer, Macbook Pro is my goto. Jack Black Label is good, but I still prefer Lagavulin 16yr or founders All Day IPA.

  • It should be noted that international law, like all laws, are also only followed when convenient by those that could choose to stop following it, China is no exception.

  • International Law, like all laws, only exist as far as the legal body is willing and able to enforce it. If I declare myself emperor of all mankind, and claim that you owe me tribute, do you think that decree should apply to you? If I showed up to your house with a bunch of dudes with guns and forced you to pay tribute to me under the extreme threat of violence would your answer change?

  • Miles of wire is easy and low maintenance. Miles of pipes doesn't make sense, but water is also not hard to localize. Miles of stroads is what defines suburbia. A rural highway with a driveway every 2-3 miles defines rural living and it's perfectly sustainable. It would be better if the rural hubs were connected to cities via railroads, like they used to be, but still they aren't too bad as is.

  • The dumbest most neoliberal take ever. Maybe poor people deserve it?

    Actually I take it back, dude is probably a white supremacist.

    Christopher Armitage @chrisarmitage1 Most tell you what's wrong. I try to tell you what works. Researcher, Former Law Enforcement Officer, Veteran, Author. Living in Spokane, Washington 🌲🌲🌲 with 3 feline roommates

  • Can you give an example of one of those websites?

  • Not all communities are for all people. Maybe it's refreshing that there exists a place that doesn't have the same community principles.

  • idk, but apparently hundreds of users also have no problem with the policy of the official platform. So maybe that isn't the right space for you.

  • Even in a full-communism-now utopia, the idea of compensating people for their creative endeavers and labor is still going to happen, that compensation will be indistinguishable from "money" as it is currently used.

  • Maybe we will lose low effort artists but gain great music by passionate people.

    You'll never be able to find it or hear it though. The barrier to entry for AI music is so low, even lower then the "low-effort" artist you are deriding, that typical streaming sites will be inundated by it and nothing else will be found. The algorithm(tm) already prefers low-royalty music, and AI music will certainly have the lowest costs to play.

  • Sounds like someone should move to their own discord server?

  • Some of them sure, but more often then not they hire adjunct professors, or use graduate students on visa's to ensure they don't have to pay tenured professors. I say if your employee is on a visa, 10x salary is the minimum. don't want to pay 10x salary? Well America is a large place with lots of people that are unemployed and over-educated, so maybe try to give-back to the society that you rely on.

  • Yes, like them being women. Very good.

  • They were also the only two candidates ever to push a policy like "Student loan forgiveness for entrepreneurs who open a business in a disadvantaged area for 3years." Biden didn't push that policy and he won, neither did trump, nor Obama. So looking at the data, it's obvious why Hillary and Kamala lost.

  • Force the university to pay 10x the mean salary. That way the university is disincentivized to abuse the program. If he is truly the foremost expert in whatever field, then his salary should be a drop in the bucket compared to the grants he will need to actually do his research and it shouldn't be a big deal.

  • It was a good thought

    It was never a good thing. It was only ever intended to put downward pressure on domestic workers wages and increase the labor pool.

    I would support an h1b program if the base wage had to be 10x the normal wage for the position they were hired. If you are truly an exemplary unicorn worker that can't possibly be found in the rest of the US, then why not mandate a healthy and definitely non-exploitive wage for them?