Skip Navigation

Posts
922
Comments
559
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • One Community Group document that will be moving into the Working Group is LOLA, the live data portability spec that originated in the CG’s Data Portability Task Force. LOLA lets users move from one ActivityPub server to another while retaining all their social connections, their content, and their reactions. It’s a great improvement for data portability on the social web.

    Exciting stuff!

  • tl;dr It seems sketchy.

    The founder of notice news (and author of this story), Andrew Springer, is a real dude. He seems to have mostly worked at news organizations running their social media. He claims to be an "emmy and peabody award-winning journalist," but he was not working as a journalist when either of those awards were won. In 2012, Good Morning America won an emmy. He was a "social media producer." In 2013, ABC News won a Peabody for Hurricane Sandy coverage. Again, he was a social media producer. His bio/CV is here.

    Looking at his author page on that site, they claim that he's published nearly 20 stories in the last 48 hours. Seems unrealistic. Plagiarism? AI? Both seem more likely to me. They don't have an entry with any bias monitoring organization that I can find.

    As for Voldeng, I can't find much on her but she seems like a bit of a grifter. This is her bio on her brand page:

    I create what others often call impossible. I stand for my brand. I build to protect. And I protect what I know in my own knowing way, is right for me to protect.

    My work spans every sweep of civilization, and beyond.

    From advertising, aerospace, defense, education, energy, environment, finance, governance, law, media, science, and technology, to realms of sheer starlit wonder.

    She does it all!

    She sells access to different tiers (prices not listed) of "The Knight League", which is described like this:

    The League of the Almighty, on Earth.

    It is a fellowship and a calling. Where warrior knights are trained in courage, discipline, and joy. Where oaths matter, crests are borne with honour, and training is effortless lived practice. Where knights rise — noble, ferocious, joyful, Jedi-esque — to stand for something higher. The Most High.

    What the fuck is the Knight League? No idea. All her descriptions are master classes in assembling words to say next to nothing. The link that @loppy@fedia.io posted is another great example. I have no idea what it is but I know it wants your money.

    I'd be very skeptical of either of those people in terms of vetting sources or doing serious journalism.

  • Twitter ghouls.

  • I think it's more like news analysis than straight news or opinion. The line for me is that it's bringing together recent reporting to get a sense of what Europe will or could do rather than making an argument for what Europe should do.

  • Yeah, it's really making CSAM production a subscription service. Vile.

  • I updated the archive link. The caption's gone now.

  • Oh weird. It looks like maybe it was a mistake they corrected. It's on the archived page but not the actual page.

  • The US has threatened sanctions if they do.

  • Beer

    Jump
  • Molson, Kokanee, Sleeman, Alexander Keith's, Coors and Moosehead are all made in Canada . . .

    Molson is owned by Coors. Coors is American. Sleeman is owned by Sapporo. Keith's and Kokanee are both owned by Labatt's, which is owned by InBev (Belgian). Granville Island is owned by Molson (Coors). Moosehead is actually Canadian though.

    You really have to go smaller to find Canadian-owned breweries. P49 is fucking great if they can find it.

  • Beer

    Jump
  • Labatt Brewing Company is owned by AB InBev, which is actually not American but Belgian. Definitely not Canadian though.

    The answer probably depends on where you are. There are tons of small Canadian breweries that ship to the US. Steam Whistle Brewing is a very large independent brewery that just makes a Pilsner. They're probably big enough to be fairly widely available. Buy it in cans though. They're idiots for packaging in green bottles.

  • I suspect that it's two different mushrooms. You could keep an eye on it to see if one dissolves into a puddle of ominous black goo and the other doesn't to confirm.

  • No doubt, if the goal was to be some rich, worthless scumfuck I'd be doing different things. I'd probably have to spend my days trying to suck Trump Coins out of some grifter's dick. Or maybe I'd build a time machine to go back and make sure I popped out of a lady with a connection to an emerald mine. But... we all have our paths to walk. Mine is to toil endlessly in pursuit of purpose...

    This conversation is actually a great example of complexity not mattering. You're on an Australian server, I'm on a Canadian server. We're replying to a post from a user on a third server to a community on a fourth server that people mistakenly think is American but is actually hosted in Germany. None of that matters because it just works. It's indistinguishable from posts and comments -- including you trying blame the whole thing on me -- at the same place. You can make it seem very complicated but all anyone has to do is type words in the little box and press the button to post it.

    The way too many people think about the Fediverse right now is like thinking that you need to know every minor detail about how a call could make it from a cell phone in Australia to a cell phone in Canada. You don't need to know that to make a call. You don't need to know all the minutia about ActivityPub or federation to use the fediverse.

  • Shaggy mane!

  • I think it's really overstated how tech savvy you have to be. I don't do anything highly technical here. I signed up to a server, searched for things I was interested in, and subscribed to communities with the stuff I liked. I vote, comment, and post. There are great apps on the mainstream app stores. Yes, more than one thing is inherently a bit more complicated than one thing. But, lest we forget, one is also the loneliest number.

    We should really be telling people how easy this shit is.

  • People over-react because it's new to them, but it's not really that complicated. It's not like email never caught on because it's federated.

  • You're really just renting hardware. You own all your games and they aren't tied to that service. The appeal is to play PC games without being on the perpetual hardware upgrade hamster wheel.

  • Fungdark

  • There are a bunch of ridings that are still too close to call. The advanced and special ballots remaining have skewed heavily toward the liberals. They still may end up with a majority.