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@AJEnglish

To be clear, the Senate can move forward any time it wants to. A single senator can't hold up the works if most senators want to proceed.

The whole Senate is effectively backing the protest.

@crentist

I believe that is the case.

At least some officials have said that the agency being whistleblown looked at him and decided he wasn't a whistleblower, which is all sorts of Kafkaesque.
@TwistedEagle

@thelinuxfraud

My impression is that X11 was very flexible and could do so many things and address so many corner cases, while Wayland wanted to tighten things down, give up functionality for the sake of efficiency, and really that's not the direction I personally would prefer.

It's really awesome being able to throw X11 windows across different servers. The networking side of it is really cool.

I get the argument that most people don't do that stuff these days.... but I would still miss having those features.

@sil

From what I read in the article it doesn't sound like violation of any copyright is their issue but rather their not wanting to reveal trade secrets, the training that produced their AI systems.

They don't care that we know they used copyrighted material. Obviously they did. There's no issue with that. But they want to protect the AI model they invested in against anyone else who might follow their exact footsteps to make their own competitor.

@sil

Keep in mind that depending on jurisdiction copyright does not mean necessarily that it's illegal to use the content. It's more about effectively claiming ownership of somebody else's content, but you're still free to use it.

So it's not that they did crimes.

@CarlG314

Aaaah, so even more like senators where there are different classes of senators, there would be different classes of justices serving their time.

Sounds like a reasonable way to handle it.

@richardrathe @BrennanCenter

@BrynnTannehill74

But this is exactly why we need to be clear about what's happening, so we can be clear that a lot of the politicians that we keep reelecting for some reason are letting us down.

These are questions for lawmakers, not the courts. And yes, the lawmakers are really not doing their jobs the way they should. But we keep reelecting them, keep handing them the power to keep going, so I guess we're okay with it.

We absolutely should not let them point fingers at the court, though, for their own failures to fix the laws. That's how they try to duck accountability.

And if we buy these false narratives about the court rulings we won't hold these lawmakers accountable, and so we won't get progress on these important issues.

@MHowell

@mastodonmigration

Realize that there is absolutely nothing contradictory about algorithms in platforms. Effectively that just comes down to a UI tweak, and any client or interface is perfectly free to implement whatever algorithm it wants.

Heck, keep in mind that newest first is itself an algorithm, although a quite simple one.

Further, one of the huge criticisms I have of is exactly that it is so instance-focused instead of user-focused so that it does not really help people escape. would really be a good fit for that philosophy.

So would use federation to bring a bunch of content from us to its users, while offering to its users the chance to be heard by all of us, at least in theory. That's good for the company. That's good marketing for them.

I think you overestimate the downsides of Meta turning on federation.

@uspolitics

To be clear, it's not a Republican block, it's the entire Senate deciding not to move forward on the nomination.

The Senate is free to vote to move forward at any point. If it's not moving forward, that's because most of the senators have not decided to move.

And that means it's a Democrat thing if anything, but really it's the whole Senate.

@enoch

Careful: I never like to believe Trump's brags since it sort of plays into his hand, and gives him the attention and feeling of importance that he really wants to have.

I'm not so quick to believe this small man had that sort of impact just because he says he did.

@JStatePost

Well I can see your cause for concern and why you decided to walk that back.

FWIW, to me personally, I think that terminology probably captured what you were trying to say pretty well, so maybe I would have clarified with "political parasite"? But yeah, not trying to argue, I see where you're coming from there.

@markets

Whenever I see a story like this I always wish it was reframed more literally: it's not so much that FDA is *allowing* imports of the essential drug as it is the FDA putting a pause on prosecution of anybody doing the importing.

In other words, those drugs would already be heading into the country had the FDA not been threatening prosecution previously.

Yeah, we've probably should have the FDA policing and blocking the sale of some drugs, but being clear about how that works helps emphasize that it is a balance that we need to consider.

@stanstallman

But this is not a matter of opinion. It is a matter of fact.

The guy literally did not say what he's being haranged for saying. I would share your opinion that supporting white nationalists would be a bad thing, so we actually agree on our opinions. It's just that, factually, he didn't.

But yeah, I'm sure that's as far as the matter goes here.

@JStatePost

Well I end up wondering what specifically was wrong with your post.

Just because something is reminiscent of Twitter doesn't mean it's necessarily bad. And I would worry that people are getting criticized not on their own terms but because of association with the other site.

@jellyosaurus

@jellyosaurus

Well it's probably also the reason why many people say yes, but I find the content here to be so one-sided, so lacking in different opinions, pretty much an echo chamber.

And that disappoints and frustrates me.

I imagine a lot of people feel that their mental health has improved through the lack of challenges to their perspectives, but I don't think it's healthy overall.

@stanstallman

Yes but when you pull up the interview you can see that these outlets, including Rolling Stone, seem perfectly happy to promote the false narrative because it's dramatic and gets them more clicks.

Rolling Stone is not a particularly trustworthy news source. This is an example of why.

@stanstallman

That's not what he said though.
He rejected the premise that they were white nationalists in the first place, saying that they were mislabeled.

He absolutely didn't defend white nationalists. He wasn't talking about white nationalists at all, and that was his point.

@drahardja

Yes, but they cost a good five bucks more to produce :-)

@ahimsa_pdx

Ha, FWIW, personally I would go the other way with that.

If you told me I needed to choose a server or instance, fine, but choosing a community seems like a much bigger deal, much more daunting.

Just to say, some people are going to feel more scared away by that terminology, even if some people like it better.

@Yoshi

I mean, what subterfuge exactly?

Their opinions are publicly accessible to us all, so they aren't exactly being sneaky. Heck, if they were trying to be sneaky then the opinions would have no influence at all. It is only through their public actions that they have any impact on the world at all.

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