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  • Overall, I can see liking this. But mostly I think the summaries should be public.

    In general the problem with moderators is they can be fairly partisan. I don't know if it's still the case after the whole API ... thing, but certain groups of moderators had access to bots that did what is essentially equivalent to the sort of thing. What tended to happen is the good mods would become overwhelmed and bring on a "power mod" and the powermod has secret axes to grind and political agendas that they bring with them into the sub.

    Another problem I generally had with reddit towards the end of my serious engagement there is that a lot of things reported to admin started being evaluated by non-American English speakers who don't have the cultural context to understand sharp turns of phrase and plays on idioms. Americans would understand the words mean the opposite of what they literally say, but you can't expect ESL overseas contractors to understand these nuances. So I would be concerned that AI is similar... except for the fact that it's not really a change from the status quo.

    Would be nice if we also had AI summaries of moderator behavior and if these were visible to everyone. I wouldn't be surprised if admin have (or soon will have) access to AI summaries of moderator activity and behavior. So that might be another shoe to drop. I can see it can be good if it improves modding for the good mods who just want to build communities. Basically it might reduce the need for the powermod protection racket.

  • Things have changed in the last year or so. This is about the next releases of distros, nobody's going to go back and retrospectively remove X11 and Xwayland will continue to exist when needed.

    All the hubbub is because Gnome recently decided to drop support for launching X11 sessions from the login manager. Gnome's login manager is Wayland based and Wayland handles handing off graphics to different users properly. With X11 you have to have ugly things like killing the login X server and then spawning a new X server as the new user among other things is ugly and unfixable without serious security issues.

    Wayland wasn't stuck with design decisions that made sense almost 50 years ago in the '80s and does things far more sanely and with less complex code.

    Anyway at some point someone has to pull the plug and Gnome has done that. Many distros are built on Gnome so that's that.

  • You are correct but don't forget that somebody's swing app broke and they're real salty about it.

    Also I can't speak for whatever you're worried about but when I moved to Wayland the only thing that broke was java shit like Matlab and those closed software companies are not going to fix their shit for Wayland unless they have to. Oracle certainly isn't going to do shit unless forced. It's not open source anything holding anything back.

  • Can we just let X11 die with some dignity? I don't know who this guy on the video is? Is he important? My impression is he seems like a generic popcorn feeder.

    Go fork X11 or whatever, nobody is stopping you! Feel free to try and solve the puzzle of making X11 not suck while subject to the constraints of having to satisfy specifically those users who will not allow you to make any changes that inconvenience their rickety 40yo software that nobody cares enough to update to fix whatever is keeping it from running in Wayland (pro tip we're not talking about open source software here, the things that break are closed source blobs). It's well worth the effort rather than spinning up a container or kvm to run that proprietary binary.

  • Yeah these things are Rorschach amplifiers. It tells you a lot about the person writing the prompt.

  • What are people still doing on the Internet? There are Nazis on the Internet.

    Do you know how bars get filled with Nazis? Someone notices a Nazi and someone shrieks that everyone's a Nazi and people leave and let the Nazis take over. It's fighting the Nazis that keep the Nazis at bay, not running away from them.

  • Generally if it should be easy to find and you're reading a shitty article, it can be easily found in believable sources.

    I'm 99.9% certain the article is talking about ex-FBI agent Johnathan Buma. There are many articles about him, but I wasn't aware of it (been tuning a lot of news out lately, tbh). All details match and he was very recently interviewed by ZDF (significant legit German news organization) for a new investigational documentary about Elon Musk. I posted it in a different comment that has video of some parts of the interview (English with German dubbed over top). There's also a link to the full documentary. I started watching it but haven't finished.

  • So odd that a lawsuit and bail is mentioned and yet no actual details. A variety of advocates and etc are supposedly outraged and up in arms etc. And yet no deets. Almost as if some website with Kiev in the domain might be spewing bullshit against Russia. Definitely doesn't smell like desperate LLM bullshit.

  • It's still up 55% vs one year ago. Yeah it's fallen from its post-election run up which peaked around the new year, but frankly it just looks like it's gone back to pre-election value and trend.

  • I keep seeing this analogy and unfortunately that's not how email servers work so it never really helps honestly. The servers are the To: fields, not the From: fields. And there's also no real analogy about privacy. With most email providers the intent isn't that everyone reads everyone else's email. So frankly I really don't know what insight this is supposed to provide if it doesn't behave like email.

    And there's a big safety difference. With something like Bluesky you have to trust the server admins to behave. With ActivityPub you have to trust each and every user of the service. Which is why server admins get shirty about whether they will forward messages to or from other servers. That whole situation doesn't really exist with email. It's not like you have create a Hotmail account because Gmail has decided to defederate with Google or whatever.

  • I recently started using TriliumNext (Trilium's active fork) as a personal knowledge base for work and it's really cool.

    One thing I didn't expect is the multi-user editing feature means I can leave it open on multiple computers (and open it on others) and all the open copies are updated in real time (and it opens to exactly where I had been) so I don't have to think much about merging edits or saving work before changing locations. I was very pleasantly surprised by that.

    My job has me jumping around computers a lot with various amounts of downtime in different locations and I want to continue at home etc. Being able to just browse to my server and be exactly where I was in Trilium is perfect.

    I was basically looking for how to run LogSeq entirely remotely as a PKM (without touching work computers). You can self host LogSeq but it still runs locally so you have to sync each time and other issues. Trilium is what works best for me.

    Another interesting option I came across is silverbullet.md

  • Would literally buy an electric VW Beetle at this point for the lulz

  • Firewalla recently introduced a wifi mesh device. I'm not currently looking to replace my mesh but it looks very interesting and has some security features that look interesting.

    https://firewalla.com/products/firewalla-ap7

  • World News @beehaw.org

    Trump to revoke legal status for 240,000 Ukrainians as US steps up deportations

    www.reuters.com /world/us/trump-plans-revoke-legal-status-ukrainians-who-fled-us-sources-say-2025-03-06/
  • Doist is very much remote work and there were a lot of stories about them and how they operate during the pandemic because they had been doing it for so long. Global headquarters are in Portugal and CEO lives/works from Italy from what I can tell. They have offices/legal presence in many countries.

    Founder/CEO was born in Bosnia, grew up in Denmark, started todoist during college, used a startup incubator in Chile, later moved headquarters to Portugal, now gives lots of talks about internet entrepreneurship in EU.

  • World News @beehaw.org

    Europe’s Moment of Truth

    www.foreignaffairs.com /ukraine/volodymyr-zelensky-trump-europes-moment-truth