Look, people choosing bluesky, likely knowing full well that it will eventually go bad and they’ll need to relocate again… we can scold people like that for choosing a precarious VC backed service, or maybe we can recognize that in the social media space that some people are … migrants.
Maybe we should ask ourselves what Bluesky offers now, in the near term, that’s compelling to people who might not enjoy the luxury of a long term, and ask what their choices say about us in the process.
email: “SoCal Edison is enabling MFA for all accounts!”
me: haha, woot
*clicks*
"MFA options are text message or automated voice call.”
ಠ_ಠ
(╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
(There is no excuse, in almost 2025, for anybody to still be rolling out new SMS-based multi-factor authentication. This is like the nonfat, sugar-free, decaf latte: the "why bother?” of MFA.)
Xavier 2024: "An evidence-based and critical analysis of the Fediverse decentralization promises" https://arxiv.org/abs/2408.15383 "Our findings suggest that Fediverse will face significant challenges in fulfilling its decentralization promises, potentially hindering its ability to positively impact the social Web on a large scale." #nwit
"The US top rate of tax in 1944 was 97%. The postwar top rate from 1945-63 was 94%, and it was 70% from 1965-80. This was the period of the largest expansion of the US economy in the nation's history."
Taxing the rich is the most Conservative policy you can think of, but somehow conservatives keep claiming that is a radical Socialist idea. 🤷♂️
https://pluralistic.net/2024/10/15/piketty-pilled/ by @pluralistic
Marie Curie didn't necessarily aim to hire women in her lab, but she didn't have anything AGAINST women, and so ended up creating a network of more than 45 women trainees who changed (and are still changing) the course of science. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-marie-curie-helped-a-generation-of-women-break-into-science/
One thing @pluralistic doesn't mention in his enthusiastic promotion of #RSS is that every #YouTube channel also has its own RSS feed. On desktop, press Ctrl+u to view the source and then search for /feeds/ .Copy the URI into your RSS reader and voilà! No need to rely on YouTube's terrible notification system; you get notified of each new video when it's posted, and the site can't put any obstacles in your way as they love to do.
https://pluralistic.net/2024/10/16/keep-it-really-simple-stupid/
When Frances Perkins was a little girl, she asked her parents why nice people could be poor. Her father told her not to worry about those things, and that poor people were poor because they were lazy and drank.
Eventually, she went to Mount Holyoke College, and majored in physics. In her final semester, she took a class in American economic history and toured the mills along the Connecticut River to see working conditions. She was horrified.
Eventually, instead of teaching until she married, she earned a masters degree in social work from Columbia University. In 1910, Perkins became Executive Secretary of the New York City Consumers League.
She campaigned for sanitary regulations for bakeries, fire protection for factories, and legislation to limit the working hours for women and children in factories to 54 hours per week. She worked mainly in New York State’s capital, Albany. Here, she made friends with politicians, and learned how to lobby.
On March 25th, 1911, Frances was having tea with friends when they heard fire engines. They ran to see what was happening, and witnessed one of the worst workplace disasters in US history. The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire was devastating, killing 146 people, mostly young women and girls.
Frances watched as fire escapes collapsed and fireman ladders couldn’t reach the women trapped by the flames. She watched 47 workers leap to their deaths from the 8th and 9th floors.
Poignantly, just a year before these same women and girls had fought for and won the 54 hour work week and other benefits that Frances had championed.
These women weren’t just tragic victims, they were heroes of the labor force. Frances at that moment resolved to make sure their deaths meant something.
A committee to study reforms in safety in factories was formed, and Perkins became the secretary. The group took on not only fire safety, but all other health issues they could think of. Perkins, by that time a respected expert witness, helped draft the most comprehensive set of laws regarding workplace health and safety in the country. Other states started copying New York’s new laws to protect workers.
Perkins continued to work in New York for decades, until she was asked by President Elect Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933 to serve as Secretary of Labor. She told him only if he agreed with her goals: 40-hour work week, minimum wage, unemployment and worker’s compensation, abolition of child labor, federal aid to the states for unemployment, Social Security, a revitalized federal employment service, and universal health insurance. He agreed. Similar to what she had worked for in New York, her successes became the New Deal, and changed the country and its workers forever.
So while you may not know her name, you certainly know her legacy.
- Via: People You May Not Know, But Probably Should
Today on the arXiv:
Loading errors due to the system being spammed by requests from scrapers who want to keep stealing everyone's papers all at once.
We did not agree to have our work fed into the automated plagiarism machine.
QT Steinn Sigurðsson
2024 October 16
Dearest LLM script kiddies who are slashdotting @arxiv - if you're being blocked for being rude, the solution is not to try the same stupid thing again an hour later.
You're spoiling the Commons.
If you're reading this, please #boost so I can get back to being federated with the #fediverse. Unfortunately, the data center I've been hosting with for years and years encountered some serious issues. I had to move suddenly, losing almost everything. I took the chance to change the software I use. But I've still lost all of my followers, all of my federation, etc! It's also taken down rblind.com, my passion project to get more #blind folks off #reddit. I'll be bringing that back over the coming days. In the meantime, hi! I'm a blind guy who uses the #NVDA #screenreader, loves #accessibility and works in the field, and reads tons of #fanfic, #litrpg, and #sciencefiction and #fantasy in my spare time. Nice to meet you!
“If you’ve suspected that you’re yelling into a void about the election on Instagram, Facebook or Threads, it might not be your imagination.” https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2024/10/16/instagram-limits-political-content-shadowban-election-posts/
Read about True Value hardware declaring bankruptcy today: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/true-value-declares-bankruptcy-sells-174128698.html
Which seemed odd to me, as they've been around for long time selling low-priced items.
It took me exactly one search to find perhaps another reason beyond the claimed "the housing market stalled and consumers have become far more picky about discretionary purchases like hardware” for the news:
As I wake up to the first morning with running #water coming out of my faucets in quite some time... I am mildly amazed at the Herculean effort required to accomplish this feat.
Considering the devastation and the videos of our water system that I've seen I was completely prepared for months.
Standing ovation for all of you water system workers out there waist deep in mud hooking up monster pipes.
You killed it
To give you a glimpse into the vast image data that #ESAEuclid is observing in its surveys, #ESA published a new set of images: a section of 2 weeks of observations, 132 deg² on the sky, that's 500x the area of the Moon, and zoom-ins.
Check out the images in our Euclid Blog, where you can also find a link to ESA's full release with high-res images and all explanations and background.
https://www.euclid-ec.org/euclids-first-large-piece-of-the-sky
Just got back from my dentist. Her boss has introduced #AI into the clinic. It claims to automatically detect many conditions and right away it found 4 issues affecting my teeth.
The only downside was that its findings were 100% wrong, which my dentist of many years' experience spotted immediately.
We couldn't get enough of code review anxiety, so we ALSO assessed our code review anxiety toolkit to get a more ecologically valid understanding of how to mitigate it (aka how well something works in real world scenarios, rather than in a controlled lab setting). Please enjoy this mixed methods follow up to the popular code review anxiety study by myself, @grimalkina & @KFosterMarks
to celebrate selling out the first print run of How Integers and Floats work, we're giving away 500 PDF copies of the zine!
use code BUYONEGIVEONE at checkout to get a copy for free. (no need to enter your real address)
As usual this works with the honour system, this code is for you if $12 USD is a lot of money for you!
VOTING PRO TIPS:
—if you are mailing in your vote, send it NOW — post office delays are going to be epic this year, intentional and otherwise
—if you have Early Voting available DO IT — early enthusiasm counts plus you avoid any unforeseen illnesses/accidents that might keep you from voting
—most states track your mail-in ballot, from when they send it to you to when they receive it back; use the online tools to make sure your ballot is safely returned and counted
Hi everyone! I just wanted to give you a heads up that Perforce has forcibly seized control of the #Puppet Community Slack. They've banned me and removed the Community team and all moderators. This means that there is currently no spam or harassment moderation. It means that the community no longer has the ability to limit monetization. And it means that Perforce has direct access to your account info and no longer needs to go through the Community team when they need sales and marketing leads.
Theoretical physicist by training (PhD in quantum open systems/quantum information), University lecturer for a bit, and currently paying the bills as an engineer working in optical communication (implementation) and quantum communication (concepts), though still pursuing a little science on the side. I'm interested in physics and math, of course, but I enjoy learning about really any area of science, philosophy, and many other academic areas as well. My biggest other interest is hiking and generally being out in nature.