aquovie

joined 2 months ago
[–] aquovie@lemmy.cafe 9 points 1 month ago (3 children)

I think, in this particular case, it's aggressive apathy/incompetence and not malice. Remember, Trump didn't even know what Nvidia was.

AI's don't have a skin color or use the bathroom so you can't whip your cult into a frenzy by Othering it. You can't solidify your fascism by getting bogged down in the details of IP law.

[–] aquovie@lemmy.cafe 19 points 1 month ago (3 children)

You need to properly detect that they're bots first and then they'll just figure out how to spoof that. Then you're back to square one.

Abstractly, POW doesn't need to determine if you're a bot or not. To make a request, as a human or bot, you need to pay in cpu-time. The hope is that the cost is not so high that a human notices very much but for a bot trying to hoover up data as fast as possible, the aggregate cost is high.

I think the more horrifying aspect is that they'll just build ever bigger datacenters to crunch POW tests faster and the carbon cost will skyrocket even more.

[–] aquovie@lemmy.cafe 3 points 1 month ago

Reddit has downvotes. That hasn't saved it from misinformation, trolls, and radicalization.

[–] aquovie@lemmy.cafe 2 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Was the tape to cover the write protect notch on the floppy?

[–] aquovie@lemmy.cafe 14 points 1 month ago (3 children)

Careful. Lemmy is too small to draw the attention of sophisticated, persistent abuse. As a company, Reddit has struggled with revenue and we've all seen those struggles quite publicly. Lemmy instances with those same challenges would probably just fold and close up.

Federated networks give you freedom but the potential for abuse is proportional to that freedom while at the same time, federation is far more expensive taken as a whole.

[–] aquovie@lemmy.cafe 9 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Don't you also need a developer license? So that's like an additional $8/month subscription to sideload on iOS.

Or I could be wrong 🤷

[–] aquovie@lemmy.cafe 2 points 2 months ago

If it's not a tree, why call it a branch? Maybe branch doesn't make any sense either. Maybe none of this makes any sense! Oh my God, what are we even doing here?!?! Ahhhhhhhhhhhh!

[–] aquovie@lemmy.cafe 11 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (6 children)

I'll never understand why we didn't just go back to saying "trunk".

[–] aquovie@lemmy.cafe 1 points 2 months ago

It was a tongue in cheek strawman or if you want to be fancy, a pedagogical tool.

If "providing housing" is a job/service/whatever produced by workers then I, as a theoretical landlord, own some means of production and split the profits with all of the workers: myself.

It seemed like a funny twist of words.

[–] aquovie@lemmy.cafe -5 points 2 months ago (7 children)

Ah, Landlords aren't the evil capitalist class then. They're just a worker that owns the means of production and splits the profits evenly with themselves.

[–] aquovie@lemmy.cafe 3 points 2 months ago

They're not all identical in features and function though. Nix is different from Gentoo which is different from RPM. And they're all going to have drawbacks and in some cases, have complete showstoppers.

  • Portage/Aur: Not everyone is gonna compile things and if you say use the pre-built options, then this isn't the right choice.
  • Debian/RPM: You'll never get distro's to agree to release names or contents, like glibc and ssl versions
  • Nix: Learning curve is murder. Not every app is made to be reproducible.
  • FlatPak/Snap/AppImage: Loses almost all the advantages of a distro that we take for granted: CVE patching, tested updates, etc.

This is a brief, maybe even unfair overview but it's not as easy as "just pick one".

And this ignores the huge pantheon of "language package managers" like pip, gem, npm, cargo, cpan, maven, etc^infinity. Ideally these would just be build dep managers but you get a lot of apps packaged and distributed this way too. Some distro's/package systems bravely try to keep up but it's a losing battle.

[–] aquovie@lemmy.cafe -3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I used to have this view but I've come around: change can be painful but it's also necessary. It's like a wildfire: it's destructive but it allows for new growth and it's a sign of a healthy, sustainable ecosystem. Suppressing change isn't healthy.

Do I think that every change from Gnome is a winner? Nope but I do think they're doing their best to move in the right direction, as they see it. And for that, I'll keep using Gnome and I wish them good luck.

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