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@jrefior

If you believe those people to be the norm, then they aren't the extreme, by definition.

@newsopinionsandviews@masto.ai

These stories seem to forget how Supreme Court opinions work, acting as if they're mere politicians voting up and down on laws.

The Supreme Court presented reasoning to support its decision. It didn't simply vote like a politician, and it stands to be held to account based on the reasoning that it laid on the table for us all to see.

It's such a huge distraction to go looking for personal drama, ad hominem attacks, and personal transactions when we can see exactly what logic the court presents to us, that we can judge.

@bloodaxe

Well, without naming any names because I don't want to sound like I think anyone has solved this problem (though maybe someone has!), but there have been many efforts over the years to work on distributed storage efforts that could help out here.

I'm just thinking, people interested enough in an instance that they'd maintain an account on it and be active on it might also be interested in contributing their spare processing or storage space, even if they can't afford to chip in payments.

Distributed social media distributing its resource usage out to users is a reasonable concept!

@obryanb @thelinuxEXP

@JamesGleick

To be fair, the two statements are talking about different things, the whole Senate vs the Judiciary Committee.

The Senate has a backlog of nominees awaiting consideration by the whole Senate, so they're working through that backlog even if the Judiciary Committee is moving a little slow adding more to the end of the line.

Not that this statement really *needs* to be taken seriously, but at least it's a moment to talk about Senate procedure... among people nerdy enough to be interested in that stuff :)

@jrefior

Careful about equating Republicans with radicalized far right extremists.

Such people likely reject the Republican party as corrupt or otherwise not sufficiently far right.

There are MUCH more toxic places online than Facebook.

@olireiv

Well, it's the latest expression of the long-fashionable drive to target Thomas.

Like any fashion, it's hard to say exactly what brings it about, as different people sign on and follow the bandwagon for different reasons.

But yeah, they're targeting him because, for example, media outfits knew they'd have a built in audience, and built in clicks, for creating these stories.

@anarchautist

@bloodaxe

Well what is the major cost? Storage? Bandwidth? Processing?

Maybe there are ways for users to make in-kind donations too.

@thelinuxEXP

@Natanox

I think you misidentify the problem, or at least miss one huge problem.

Sure, empty timeline may be one problem, but an even more fundamental problem is that of the complication of having to choose an instance in the first place. It seems to me that's the real problem this addresses in the onboarding process.

If users don't even sign up because of choice paralysis of having to pick an instance, then it doesn't even matter whether timelines are empty. The user won't get that far.

I'm not sure what better option there could be for addressing that than getting the user in and then encouraging them to switch to an instance they might enjoy better.

For example, sending them to a random instance doesn't seem like a good way forward either.

@Gargron

@hankg

Per account sounds like a good idea since IMO one of the best use cases for having multiple accounts in the first place is to wear different hats, like work vs personal personas.

@lauren

Well then why would any policy change at the Federal Reserve tell us that there's something wrong in macroeconomics, for one example?

@homlett

You might also want to check out how is trying to solve a similar issue of providing a static address for dynamic content in a decentralized way.

As I recall, a major solution is called IPNS.

In short, IPFS is decentralized, and all content in IPFS is immutable and addressed using a hash. But how do you update to a new hash when there's a new version of content, without doing it in a centralized way?

They're using DNS, controlled by the user, to provide the pointer to the latest version, similar to what you describe here.

volkris boosted

@lauren

You're confusing a lot of concepts here, the study of macro against bureaucratic reports and management decisions, and the interface between employment and inflation.

All of those concepts are loosely coupled at best.

@demvoter

It only applies to counties where a significant number of people have had their abilities to cast their votes undermined by polling places not having ballots for people to use.

Whether a person agrees with this resolution or not, that is the core of the law, the resolution to that situation where people were unable to vote.

@stevengoldfarb

It is not true that "The court is only allowed to block the drug if evidence is shown of it being unsafe" and it's so important to be clear about that.

AGAIN, the court here is not looking at safety but rather whether the FDA followed the law which, for better or worse, is independent of issues of safety.

The court is looking at whether the FDA followed the law, and a core issue is that the FDA used that accelerated approval when it might not have been legal to use accelerated approval.

All of the talk of lives saved has nothing to do with whether the FDA broke the law in using accelerated approval in this case.

@Susan_Larson_TN

That's what the law provides for, though.

If you're saying they'll ignore the law, then fine, but then it's not the law that's at issue here.

@uspolitics

No, the bill doesn't give official power to overturn elections.

It merely provides a way to resolution to cases where a polling place screws up and threatens voters' abilities to cast their ballots: try again, and be more professional this time.

It's really not as sensational as these articles are trying to sound.

capitol.texas.gov/tlodocs/88R/

@Susan_Larson_TN

The bill only allows the option of calling for a redo if enough polling places screw up their operations, threatening peoples' abilities to cast ballots.

It seems pretty reasonable to expect polling places to function well, so that this never becomes a consideration in the first place, and I'm not sure what a better response might be if there is such a problem

capitol.texas.gov/tlodocs/88R/

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