half

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] half@lemmy.world 1 points 6 months ago

Catzilla. Truly a loaf incarnate.

[–] half@lemmy.world 0 points 8 months ago

A mild cigar.

[–] half@lemmy.world 2 points 8 months ago (1 children)

This post was reported for spam. For the record, four cross-posts to separate on-topic communities does not constitute spam.

[–] half@lemmy.world 19 points 11 months ago (1 children)

With due respect, it is time to go outside.

[–] half@lemmy.world 5 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Individual data points like "I take pilates", "I work nights and weekends", and "I live in Smalltown, ST" might not mean anything on their own, but if you can connect this data to a single person, then realize there's only one pilates studio in Smalltown, then look up their hours and notice there's only one day class on weekdays, you can make a reasonable guess as to a regular time when a person is away from home. This is called data brokerage.

This is a comically contrived example; the real danger is in the association of countless data points spread across millions of correlated identities. It's not just your data, it's the association of your data with that of your friends and family. Most people are constantly streaming their location, purchases, beliefs, and affiliations out to anyone who cares enough to look. Bad actors may collate their data and use it to take advantage of them, and the only move they have is to ask for prohibitive legislation. As if we don't already have prohibitive legislation.

Anonymity is expensive, inconvenient, and fragile, but it's the only mechanism that protects individuals from the information economy, which I would put right next to ecology in terms of critical 21st-22nd century social problems. It also helps us resist censorship, but that's a different essay.

[–] half@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

And Jesus said, "verily, I say unto you, know thy audience."

[–] half@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

>we've been no contact with my family on and off
>why doesn't my family want to connect with me

"Going no contact" ends relationships. I've noticed a lot of people will defend "going no contact" as a normal and healthy relationship tool because they've done it, erected massive walls of pain and mistrust in core relationships, and need the support of others with similar blockades to defend the disastrous results. I've seen it recommended as a response to bad table manners. The problem is you're inflicting a death on someone while refusing them permission to grieve. There is a void in their life where a person used to be, but they can't even come to terms with that and move on because the person might come back. It is the strongest possible ultimatum. Now, boundaries are healthy, and if a relationship is giving you more pain than support, it's your prerogative to end it; that's what "going no contact" usually does. If someone lets you back into their life after you've done that, you shouldn't assume that they've forgotten what it was like to live without you.

[–] half@lemmy.world 5 points 1 year ago

Hell yes. Sic semper pingues porcos.

[–] half@lemmy.world 21 points 1 year ago

My pet theory is that NGINX was designed by a pen-tester who realized that all they needed to do to make the majority of SMBs expose their web servers to the internet was outperform Apache

[–] half@lemmy.world 9 points 1 year ago

About seven years ago, I quit dexmethylphenidate after eight years of various stimulants. I wish I could tell you there's a general solution, but I was just reading a completely unrelated book and had to get up, log into Lemmy, and respond to this thread I skimmed past three hours ago. I do take caffeine (~400mg) and nicotine (~6-10mg) daily, as well as a drop of hemp oil weekly to manage the caffeine side effects, so I might be disqualified according to some, but I don't think so. I'm sorry, but nothing will ever approach the unconditional dopamine of strong CNS stims.

Diet and exercise are essential. If I neglect them, I can fall into a loop of unproductive behavior. I mostly eat seeds, legumes, and veggies, with plenty of grain to facilitate cardio. I run 5-10K three times a week. I take protein (pea) and fiber (psyllium) supplements on top of a battery of vitamins. All of this helps me maintain a balance of stable productivity, but honestly the most life-changing thing I've ever done was get to a point in my career where I'm allowed to be productive on my own terms.

It took me until I was 26 to find a job where I was allowed to work mostly alone and be measured by my overall productivity instead of being graded by the horseshit pseudoscience that passes for academics and middle management. Obviously that's not much help to you if you don't have it yet, but please hold out. Don't listen to the horde of people with a work ethic in place of a philosophy. I fucked up or walked away from so many opportunities. You can still find independence. Society needs divergent thinkers, they just don't like to advertise it.

There are still days when I can't get anything done. There are times like this when I abandon what I'm supposed to be doing and fixate on something that really isn't part of the plan. My solution is to practice discipline generally so that I can forgive myself for wandering occasionally. I hope this isn't too disappointing. Take baby steps and trust no bitch.

 

Reddit Was a Good Business

I joined Reddit in 2008. I remember it as a perpetual series of discoveries. Every time I logged in, I would learn something I never would have seen otherwise. New technology. New comedy. New ideology. New pornography. New ability to interpolate a unique string of characters related to current events and suddenly take control of a fresh memetic stream of independent media. New feelings, identities, behavior patterns, collective ethical architectures, and business opportunities. I was an isolated adolescent allergic to all the authority and social structure in my churchy suburban youth. Reddit was an electric neon string dangling from infinity and buzzing with the secular hum of freedom, sex, and reason. I grabbed on and didn't let go for fifteen years.

We must remember it was always a business. It was an advertising marketplace operated for profit. It happened to operate at a particular scale which afforded small groups of key thinkers subjective judgements of the value of abstract concepts. For example, the value of community trust in an ad business.

RIP Silly Moose.

I am guilty of describing recent events as "the death of Reddit." While it's cathartic to type after watching a community so formative to my identity sink into the swamp of astroturfed parasocial media hosting the U.S. Congress thinks is the same thing as "the Internet," it's wrong. Reddit didn't die, it just outgrew its ideals. What died was that stupid moose. Furthermore, I'm glad it's dead. It lied to me. It convinced me to forget something very important that Frank Herbert tried to tell me a long, long time ago.

The Spice Must Flow

Most people just want content. Sad but true. People living in specialized industrial/postindustrial societies have access to infinite sources of worry restricted only by the awareness of imminent death. The role of computers in society according to almost everyone alive is to help them hang on to their jobs or to temporarily distract them from their jobs. You can put the secret truth of the universe on tap and the vast majority of people simply won't care unless it helps with one of those two things. It's human nature; getting angry and vocal about it doesn't change it. You are entitled to try.

It is because we know we will wither and die that we construct apparatuses to care for us in our impending weakness. For this reason, businesses of a certain size either grow or disappear.

"The world is a business, Mr. Beale."

Steve Huffman is taking a lot of shit right now, and that's fair. That's his job. My friends, do not confuse the face of the business for the inherent nature of the business. It is composed of mortals. Worse, it's composed of software.

September Is a Function of Connectivity

If you've migrated to a federated Reddit substitute this week, you may have already encountered ActivityPub's biggest limitation. Defederation is a massive pain in the ass. When a popular instance decides to take its toys and go home, everybody who was federated with them gets kicked in the metaphorical dick while the network figures out how to heal. On a technical level, the reason this is so expensive has to do with the inherent limitations of client-server architecture, but that's a topic for another day. Right now, defederation is being used the way it was arguably intended: to protect communities who feel threatened by massive growth. Before you know it, the natural forces of conglomeration that killed our beloved Silly Moose will turn defederation into the same political token that's represented by today's private API. The gnashing of teeth will echo across the internet as pseudointellectuals like me bemoan the "death of the Fediverse." They will be as wrong then as we are now, and we will be old.

In these fleeting moments preceding imminent death, we must use technology to love one another.

0
Leftist Infighting (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by half@lemmy.world to c/modlog@lemmy.world
 

"When we said you should nationalize controversial industries, steal from the rich, enshrine corruption, and grow the welfare state, we meant you should do it in a nice, aesthetically pleasing way that panders to our social demographic."

 

In this thread, let's discuss keyboard-driven use of the Lemmy desktop web UI.

The elephant in the room is Reddit's recent decision to destroy its longstanding relationship with community development which, in my view, helped that website retain its stature as The Link Aggregator for years and years after its core content stream and central administration had fallen into the toilet. Today I chose Lemmy as my new aggregator because its development philosophy and resulting implementation of the ActivityPub federation protocol meet my insane standards. There's only one thing I'm missing.

How Can Into Mouse-Free?

I miss the Reddit Enhancement Suite, colloquially known as RES. Navigating content and comment trees without dedicated keybindings is a big slog relative to the obscene convenience and customizability of that venerated plugin. I imagine that other users of the Old Reddit + RES combo are in a similar position to my own. Now, there are general-purpose keyboard integration layers for web browsers. I daily use and highly recommend Tridactyl, though it does have a hell of a learning curve if you're not coming from the Vim school of UX, and it's Firefox only. I can't imagine Tridactyl being any more flexible than it is, yet its intent as a general DOM parser means it can't really compete with something native, explicitly designed for parsing content lists and comment trees of embedded media.

I'd like to turn this over to the community. If you're familiar with the Old Reddit + RES lifestyle, what were the essential features you'd like to see implemented on top of the federated backend? If you're using something to fill the void, tell us about it, regardless of how hacky or specific it might be. If you love your mouse and don't see the issue here, feel free to chime in.


Please note that this discussion is not intended as and should not descend into a list of demands for Lemmy features. As I hope I've already made clear, the ideal situation is a wide variety of different applications connected together. Let's hack on stuff.

view more: next ›