Show newer

@Imoptimal @MattHodges

One thing these comments are overlooking, and a thing that needs to be shouted from the rooftops here, is that doesn't just let the content go, doesn't just open itself up to scraping, but actually and actively broadcasts the content out into the world.

So many people don't realize how public this process is, and don't realize the privacy implications of this design. They need to if they're going to use this platform consentually as informed users.

In other words, there's no need to worry about the dangers of scraping content here. ActivityPub just hands the content to you, to do with as you please.

It didn't have to be this way, but the design choices were made, so be aware.

@black_intellect

This is a good example of how we spend way too much time focusing on drama in DC and too little time monitoring the performance of our own local and state officials.

We just spent a week with wall-to-wall coverage of a technical procedure in the while who knows how much bad (or good!) work was done in our state houses, that will actually and directly impact peoples' lives.

@berkes

And again, you're basing your statements against a particular standard that others don't necessarily hold.

In your case ActivityPub isn't causing any problems *given the resources you're already devoting to it* while other people who aren't devoting those resources are having problems.

Other people who haven't expected the platform to be so bandwidth intensive are finding themselves surprised by the amount of bandwidth it takes. Your expectations are different and you're not surprised. That just speaks to expectations, not to the platform.

@chucker @black_intellect

Sometimes yes, sometimes no, depending on the situation.

Traffic is not just a pure, laminar flow. Interactions between vehicles means there is friction all along the route, and that contributes to congestion. Effectively, a crowded street is its own bottleneck.

Just like a pipe carrying water, there is a pressure drop along the length even if there's no one bottleneck at the end. And just like that pipe, there is more capacity with a wider pipe even though the pressure drop remains.

@Vaniaji@toad.social @Lady_Star_Gem

From the sound of his speech is more like Idiocracy over democracy.

I seriously don't understand how anybody could have thought that speech was a good one. His climax was literally just throwing out words that had the same first letter and making jokes that took the low road.

It was like a bad SNL character who wanted to perform beat poetry at weird moments.

So when I watched 's speech as was elected Speaker I thought he sounded dumb dumb dumb dumb dumb, like a bad SNL character.

I've been saying he sounded unserious, especially with the amount of pride he seemed to take in finding a bunch of words that all began with the same letter. Good job, buddy.

But one of the funnier things I've seen on this platform is somebody responding to that notion saying, what do you mean he was unserious? Didn't you see how he trolled McCarthy?

Oh gosh. When we're at the point that trolling from the Speaker's chair is considered serious, well

I think we've gone full .

@doctorcdf

Wow, this article is amazingly myopic, focusing entirely on the entirely superficial without any understanding of what has actually happened here, of House rules and procedures, any acknowledgment of how the Congress actually operates.

The Democrats voted in ways that pushed the majority to adopt rules that will stymie democratic efforts to shape law. It was extremely short-sighted, and it will come back to bite them pretty much immediately.

In simple terms the Democrats enabled anti-Democrat representatives to take power.

But this article would have you ignore all of the practical results of their strategy just to enjoy a little superficial smugness. It is horribly misleading.

Democrats gave up the rules of the House. They actively gave up the ability to make law here. That really sucks, and they really need to be called out on it.

@shansterable@c.im

I just want to chime in with that many of us, myself included, lost our doctors and even health insurance policies that we were pretty happy with thanks to the ACA.

I know more than one family member now that has had less access to health care after that law was passed, and the worst part is that experts were warning that it would be the outcome before passage, but they passed it anyway.

So many people in the US were made worse off by the law, and there's the feeling that we were kind of left behind, that the press didn't cover our stories, and that we were really let down by our government.

Well no, not let down, kind of actually attacked.

@wilander

Probably the drama surrounding choosing the Speaker of the House.

@trcfwtt

Who was impeached for stealing from Ukraine?

@davetroy

Sounds like you have a nice conspiracy theory there, but I would counter that maybe people simply think that the US is too far into debt?

@alfredo_liberal@universeodon.com

I think you pretty much illustrate my point here when you talk about trolling from the Speaker's chair of the House of Representatives.

How is it unserious to be a troll? Well there you go.

It also pretty well illustrates my point about the guy sounding like he was taking the low road over and over in his diatribe.

He did not come off as anyone with anything worthwhile to offer. Just a troll, a bad SNL character.

@seanthegeek @scenario

I suppose it's hard to tell the difference from the outside, not being able to read somebody's mind.

A person who says they are trying but doesn't seem to be making any progress, well I guess there's really no way to tell the difference without being able to be a mind reader.

But if you have any input on that I am all ears because a whole lot of us are a bit frustrated with certain people and not sure what to do about it.

@crlamke

Well you're generally talking about forcing one person to work for another person against their will, which the US has dabbled in in the past and decided we probably shouldn't.

If the rest of the world is still into that, well

@alfredo_liberal@universeodon.com

What exactly did you find amazing about it?

To me it sounded just really unserious.

volkris boosted

RT twitter.com/@MuseZack: I like Twitter's view count feature because it lets you see things like how @hradzka's epic deep dive thread about a minor yet pivotal character in Conan the Barbarian is getting more eyeballs than, say, The Daily Show and the entire CW network. twitter.com/MuseZack/status/16

mentions three other social media sites 

@technoshaman001

It does have video content. I just watched a couple of videos on Mastodon.

@black_intellect

Well I can't read the article behind the paywall, but generally this argument comes down to an issue of unclear goals.

Generally people complain that wider highways are still congested but they miss that those congested highways are delivering more transportation from one point to the other.

The goal of a highway is not (generally) to be congestion-free. It's to get transportation from one point to the other, so the congestion is actually a sign of more use of the highway to get there, the wider highway being congested being a sign of success in that goal.

"Fix traffic" is a silly phrase since traffic itself is a fix to the problem of people wanting to get from one place to the other. We keep widening highways because it does contribute to that goal, though.

@seanthegeek @scenario

Oh I definitely know some self-described autistic people who have had no sign of adapting over the course of years!

Show older
Qoto Mastodon

QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
An inclusive, Academic Freedom, instance
All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.