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Doomscrolling through bad news is not fun.

@mima It's not really just the plain meaning, but the cultural context. It was seemingly invented by a transphobic sexologist (who suggested they actually have some "fetish"), and it's used to coldly talk about people as if there is something wrong with them, and it's intrinsically anti-kink. That's not unlike running around suggesting people are subhuman, and like, who cares what art someone likes. And like, they also seem really creepily paranoid.

@mima TBS?

The language is creepy. Words like "paraphilia". Which seems to be used with the intent of suggesting that someone is "subhuman".

That is seriously out of line and very much not okay.

@mima This "tooters" site honestly gives me the creeps. The sort of language they use is reminiscent of some very weird circles, not really how a normal person speaks.

The dive is a work I have a bit of pride in. It's a "I wasn't born yesterday" type message for people who kept trying to use clever language, and ducking and weaving, and conflating brazenly right before our eyes. It's snappy, but it is also the only correct response to these sorts of "games".

Why do we let these people get away with this?

Well, the problem with it is that it's geared towards chilling some form of speech that the State doesn't approve of, and that isn't consistent with the First Amendment.

Whatever someone thinks of those things, it is nonetheless speech protected by the First Amendment. So, that is kind of worrying.

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truthout.org/articles/new-york

"The New York City Council approved two measures on Wednesday that would largely ban solitary confinement in city jails and require New York City Police Department (NYPD) officers to report low-level street stops."

"In 2020, a UN human rights expert declared that prolonged solitary confinement practices in the U.S. amount to psychological torture. Bill 549A places a four-hour limit on this practice and has been praised by advocates who say that the solitary confinement ban will reduce the psychological damage incarcerated people face in detainment."

"Sixteen-year-old Kalief Browder was imprisoned at Rikers Island and placed in solitary confinement for two of the three years he was incarcerated before the charges were dismissed. After being released, he died by suicide in part due to the psychological harm he suffered at Rikers. In 2019, the family received $3.3 million in a settlement with the city."

@ProstasiaInc It's not unheard of for human rights violations (i.e. violations of the prohibition on torture) to be cloaked as "help and support".

Also, out of risk of opening the "can of worms", that incident appears to have been due to that other guy, who has since stepped down from your org. You appear to have gotten significantly better since then (albeit with hiccups).

Olives boosted
Olives boosted

@bendrath This would appear to implicate qoto.org/@olives/1111915432366 and qoto.org/@olives/1115160112466 (muddling fiction with reality, real people with imaginary people, and trying to manufacture "AI panic") with supremely dodgy reasoning.

qoto.org/@olives/1111915432366 It looks like I also have to offer up my dive into bad faith conflations between fiction and reality to the tag too. Well, just in case.

It's a useful one to keep in mind just in case a bad faith actor deliberately? tries to invoke AI panic.

qoto.org/@olives/1115160112466 That said, I've been over science that tears into puritanical nonsense before.

It's remarkable how claims as to the accuracy of "PhotoDNA" seem to keep coming from the creator (who is known to be fairly activist) and not from any sort of external assessment.

Also, didn't a former Facebook employee say that there's a NDA which prevents companies from talking about false positives?

Reminder about my updated dive into bad faith conflations of fiction and reality (i.e. talking about a fictional scenario in similar tones as to if it was actually real in a bad faith manner), including for AI and VR, although not limited to those two.

Olives  
While I generally don't dive into this, I saw a few bad faith remarks which are so outrageous that I feel compelled to respond. First off, when tal...

@liberties Your website appears to be having difficulties in being indexed by the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine.

There is an impossible to dismiss GDPR notice on pages which have been captured.

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