seeking employment in tech, breaking the facade of everything being fine
.? Hi fedi!
So…this is very not working, so it's (past) time to try asking yall.
We have a low-level security certification (so we figured for months that's where we were headed), but we're beyond being particularly picky. We can code, or do helpdesk, or whatever really. We know things and we learn quickly.
Would you, or do you know anycreature who would, be willing to talk with us and maybe give us a chance, instead of summarily rejecting us because we don't have all the pretty pieces of paper? I really think that's all we need: a real chance to prove ourself.
We'd give more information upfront, but we're already /very/ uncomfortable with this post, so we're gonna leave it there. Sorry for the vagueness.
damn i wish some politicians would read GAR#185
UNDERSTANDING that the primary purpose of copyright is to promote the creation of new works;
NOTING that it is very difficult to motivate people who have been dead for a quarter century;
PUZZLED why the World Assembly nonetheless insists upon this as the minimum term for copyright;
What does anti-bias training have to do with audio engineering?
What does anti-bias training have to do with audio engineering?
One time, a film maker called me up because she wanted to use a hubub of voices as a music statement but it wasn't coming off. I listened to the audio and knew just the thing! A resonant 70s style low pass filter would keep the timbres but jettison the words. I ran her vocal recording through my synthesiser and proudly returned with the improved audio.
She listened. "This does sound a lot better," she said, "but you've completely prioritised the men's voices and removed the women."
Cis normativity aside, she was right. My process had made altos much softer and pretty much nuked sopranos. I had to go back and organise each audio sample by vocal range and run the filter multiple times. It was time consuming, but the result was much nicer.
She noticed this because she knew what it was to be silenced according to vocal range - something that has gradually faded from my mind as its no longer a regular occurrence for me. If I'd been working with a fellow tenor or a bass, we might never have noticed. The audio would have been worse and the while project subtly effected by unconscious bias.
Instead, when the film was released, a reviewer praised the sound in that section.
Unconscious bias isn't just unfair, it makes *your* work worse.
completely uninformed political commentary, violence
Reading about the current situation in Sudan is wild.
So apparently they had a dictatorship which ended with some major protests, and turned into a power sharing agreement between the military (who helped topple the dictatorship) and democracy.
The military got annoyed by some of the changes so they did a coup, arrested the prime minister and declared that they were in charge.
They were immediately met by protests so big, that they felt fire under they asses and now let the PM out declaring they want to go back to essentially the previous power-sharing agreement.
But the other forces also see the fire, so they are doing a very parent move and going "If you don't know how to share it, you cannot have it at all.".
I have no idea how this will turn out in the end, but I love the energy.
Obviously this is all extremely violent and people died, so that massively sucks, but there might be some hope for a proper and accelerated democratic transition.
I am very interested in opinions form people who know more about #Sudan (see CW), although I dunno how much of that is possible on Fedi.
Nvm, for whatever reason I was under the impression that Elixir was some JS framework, while it's pretty clearly much more reasonable. Pleroma it is then.
So I'm looking into self-hosting a microblogging fedi thingy and when looking at my options one thing really stands out – what is wrong with Friendica?
I haven't seen anyone using it, but I cannot figure out why. I would have guessed that PHP might be the reason, but all(?) the alternatives are written in JS, so that's not much of a comparative advantage.
Recommendations and anti-recommendations for the general choices very welcome.
Somewhat surprizingly I did not find this because of research related to any recent discussions, but just by repeatedly clicking "Random" on Wikipedia, a pasttime I heartily endorse.
Very interesting stuff about protests and social change, although sorely lacks a "Criticism" section: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diversity_of_tactics.
Absolutely fascinating bloke, clearly a visionary even if he wasn't completely right about the future: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri_de_Saint-Simon
TIL that ignorance of the law doesn't always hurt
In many criminal law systems you are not committing a crime when your (possibly mistaken) view of the factual situation doesn't constitute a crime, even when what you are actually doing does constitute a crime, as long as your mistake is "excusable". For example, if you take someone else's items believing they're your own (e.g. because they are very similar in appearance), you aren't committing larceny. (PL ref: art. 28 KK, CH ref: Art. 13 StGB)
Similarly, if you believe that factual situation matches a situation where a justification (e.g. self defense, or higher need) would cause your action not to be a crime, it is not a crime even if you were mistaken, as long as the mistake was excusable (e.g. if you destroy a car window to reach a realistic looking doll which you believed to be an unconscious child, you aren't committing the crime of property destruction). (PL ref: art. 29 KK, CH ref: Art. 13 StGB)
What I learned today is that you are not committing a crime when you are excusably mistaken _about the law_. Obviously, definition of "excusability" of the mistake does lots of work here -- IIUC the standard test is (a) would a typical person similar to you in education and background suspect it's a crime (b) did you have an opportunity to learn/ask whether this action is legal. (PL ref: art 30 kk, CH ref: Art. 21 StGB[*])
I find this very surprising, because it's a direct contradiction of 'ignoratia iuris nocet'.
[*] the Swiss law narrows it down to people who didn't and couldn't have known that it's a crime; I'm not sure if that should be understood in the everyday literal meaning of that phrase -- the context in StGB seems to suggest that it's intended to be slightly wider, so I suspect that this phrase has some specific meaning.
h/t to @freemo who caused me to look up all those things
Shenzhen I/O should have a realism option. When it's set to high, you need to search all over the web and pay over 200 CNY download fees in paid forums before you get the leaked datasheet you need. If you are unlucky, you have to reverse engineer the chip specification from schematics of an existing design, or if you are especially unlucky, you need to hunt all over Taobao for commercial products that internally use the chip you need for reverse engineering. #electronics
Weirdest thing I've seen recently: omc, the OpenModelica compiler, tries to open all its input files (including libraries) for writing. It then closes them, reopens for reading, and proceeds as one'd expect.
It turns out that it does that to determine whether they're read-only: https://github.com/OpenModelica/OpenModelica/blob/81537a472c9f54ea14ecf335343005f18f4e83af/OMCompiler/Compiler/runtime/systemimpl.c#L366
Why? Well, it puts that information in some parser data structure: https://github.com/OpenModelica/OpenModelica/blob/cb76b3bfcad9782ea93ef88aa0979e00ad9ca942/OMCompiler/Parser/parse.c#L420
Why? Well, it uses that when printing an error message, so that the error message can say whether the file is writeable: https://github.com/OpenModelica/OpenModelica/blob/187041202b77c6b2c406f27d1e7add6db6016548/OMCompiler/Compiler/runtime/ErrorMessage.cpp#L136
Why? I have no clue.
How do I know? It messes with gittup's determination of what's an output of a compilation command.
Stworzyli darmową alternatywę dla wadliwego i drogiego systemu szkolnego. Miasto nasłało policję
aaron swartz remembrance day, sui ment., US justice system, pol, maia, boosts ok
it's aaron swartz remembrance day today and i feel like i should use this to talk about something i think about a lot and that i think should be more widely talked about.
aaron's death was murder. it's as simple as that. the way the us justice system deals with hackers and other "national security threats" (and just the US justice system in general) is explicitly to break people. it's psychological torture intended to either make you bend to their will, off yourself or just become a psychological wreck that is no longer a risk to the system. i don't think it's really possible to understand this until you're subjected to it yourself, and unfortunately i'm subject to a small degree of the same pressure.
the main weapon the US justice system uses to break people is uncertainty, you don't know what's going to happen to you, you don't know when it's going to happen to you and you might just not hear anything for a year. but during that entire time you're aware of the fact that the US may be watching you at all times, they can use all tools at their disposal and anything you say or do can and probably will be used against you in your case. i'm still not entirely sure how good it is for me to talk about this stuff, i'd talk about it a lot more often if i knew (or not at all). they also break you with the conscious misunderstanding of facts, of what you've done, the fact that they do not care about the publics opinion, they make it very clear that they can do with you whatever they want. this all on top of the usual pressure such as like the prospect of the actual sentence itself, the money this kind of case requires, the constant fear of losing even more, not knowing when and if ever you can freely speak and travel again, not knowing when your last free day for the next two decades will be and the painful realization that there is absolutely no guarantee that there isn't just another sealed indictment waiting for you around the corner.
it's hard not to break under this pressure. i fully understand the decision of everyone who broke under this, rest in peace aaron, rest in peace kevin, rest in peace everyone i forgot about. i will try my best not to break, purely out of spite, out of anger in the name of everyone who broke before and because i have the small advantage of not actually being in the US. but let me tell you, if i do break, please don't hold it against me, understand that this is not something any human should ever have to go through, no matter what they may or may not have done.
this is not a call for sympathy, this is a call for anger.
Do you know of a succinct description of the mapping between Mastodon concepts (such as "public"/"unlisted"/... sharing modes, or visibility of replies) and ActivityPub activity entries (such as to,cc,bto,bcc,audience fields)? I would like to:
a) understand how various things I could send as a client to a Mastodon server correlate with things that I can do in a typical Mastodon client UI,
b) understand semantics of various Mastodon concepts better.
Programmer and researcher,. Ended up working with all the current buzzwords: #ai #aisafety #ml #deeplearning #cryptocurrency
Other interests include #sewing, being #lesswrong, reading #hardsf, playing #boardgames and omitting stuff on lists.
Oh, and trans rights, duh.
Header image by @WhiteShield@livellosegreto.it .
Heheh, gentoo, heh, nonbinary, heheheh... I'm so easily amused sometimes.