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@aintist

The rules require unanimous consent to suspend the normal rules, but they can, and do, suspend the unanimous consent rule by majority vote.

Just for one notable example of overcoming the unanimous consent rule, take the ending of the nomination filibuster.

They certainly didn't have unanimous consent, as there was a filibuster in the first place, so they just bypassed the unanimous consent rule itself.
@MJmusicinears @samhainnight

@SecurityWriter

No masquerade. It is innovation, we can see that with our own eyes.

Theft sounds like the misrepresentation, though.

We broadcast content into the world; it's really a tough sell to say it's theft when somebody takes what we give them and builds with it, especially considering the lack of the scarcity factor underlying the common concept of theft.

So it doesn't sound like theft masquerading as innovation as much as innovation being misrepresented as theft in the course of grinding some axes.

@SafeStreetRebel

Thanks!

I want to read more of the links in the article, but from just reading the article itself, it does sound like people having disagreements about what the law actually is and whether they can be cited or not.

So that's an issue if it's down to talking about closing a loophole that's not actually legally open in the first place, if the local official is just playing wrong about what the law says then It may be more effective to fix his misunderstanding (or fire him) than to work to make changes to the law that is right the first time.

After all, in the course of those changes such a loophole might actually be introduced!

There are different levels to the game it sounds like they are playing.

InstagramThreads 

@openwebfriend@procial.tchncs.de

If you mean it will cost money to maintain computer infrastructure, I think they have scaling of data centers sorted out. At the scale they work at, I don't think it's going to be much of an issue.

If you mean in terms of customer support, I figure they will have some pretty big labels saying they aren't responsible for what's coming in from Fediverse.

Come to think of it, nailing down those labels might be what is taking them a little extra time before they federate, figuring out the best way to disclaim responsibility for what we are all saying over here.

@cspam

That's funny. I was just reading other people grousing that is evil because it has no such moderation.

Fediverse needs to get its story straight.

@KFuentesGeorge

As commonly promoted as this conspiracy theory is, Occam's Razor would at least have us consider that maybe, just maybe, the fundamental advantages of cars over public transit has something to do with cars being popular compared to public transit.

I mean they have pretty big differences in the problems they solve well, but that gets overlooked by people who are more interested in pointing fingers at boogymen and making implicit attacks on groups you have singled out here.

It doesn't stand up as a convincing argument to anybody who's not already buying it.

@SecurityWriter

I think you misread that situation quite seriously.

Scared shitless? No, merely pointing out that it doesn't make financial sense for them to make large investments in the language models in such a legal environment, so they won't, and we'll all lose out on the benefits that their development might have contributed.

@simonzerafa

Oh no, not at all. It's nothing new that proverbial secret sauce is considered trade secret to be protected by those who developed it.

It has nothing to do with illegality. It's simply a group who made a large investment trying to protect that from copying.

@SecurityWriter

@SirTapTap

Where did you see no management of hate speech?

@BeAware@social.beaware.live

@lizfyne

Well one part is simple advertising, but another is that by federating they get to bring so much content from the Fediverse to their users for free.

So they get to bring the free content in to extend engagement with their platform. Makes sense to me.

@bigheadtales

... They voted to limit government power

They pointed out that the government did not have legal authority to be so authoritarian.

You've got a weird take on Nazis.

@Andres

Yeah, reminds me of the issues with Mastodon hammering websites for image previews as posts circulated among instances.

I wouldn't be surprised if something of yours got boosted to a large followers list, causing every one of those instances to respond with a request to your instance, without you even knowing.

Maybe even a QT that's not being reported in a standard way back to you.

@jannem

I'm sure it all varies widely by context and use case.

Very often it really doesn't matter one bit where some content came from; its value is in what it is, not from its source.

So it's really probably between individual producers and consumers of the media, to be sorted out by reading the wishes and applications.

@ray_saltrelli@mastodon.social

Yes, but I think you're overlooking that Meta can *already* do a ton of scraping due to the design of ActivityPub whether or not they launch Threads.

It's not going to be all that worse because we've been there since the first moment someone started using this protocol with such small regard to privacy controls.

@EricFielding

IPFS is really fairly misnamed as it's not so much a filesystem as a distributed database with some really powerful features to do things like build in native datatypes.

In fact, files are just one datatype for IPFS. It's basically the equivalent of storing a file in an SQL database.

Also, IPFS is tuned for smaller bits of data, not huge movie files and such.

All of that is to say, Yep! Using it to distribute scientific data like weather station readings is just about the perfect use case for it. It can present those small bits of data in semantically relevant ways.
@patrick_townsend

@patrick_townsend

Oh, you're missing it, Mastodon and ActivityPub have the exact same issue you've identified with IPFS!

Content deletion on ActivityPub is exactly as unenforced as it is on IPFS.

Your instance broadcasts content out to other instances, and you can also broadcast a request for deletion, but the remote instances are under no obligation to actually honor the request nor prove that they have.

volkris boosted

I am, for geeky reasons, mostly on Bluesky these days. Send me a DM if you’d like an invite.

(Geeky reasons: It uses #IPLD, and I *think* I can build a fully static #ATProto server on #IPFS, so my static blog can use ATProto for comments only in HTML and CSS (no JS!))

@openwebfriend@procial.tchncs.de

Why wouldn't opening their system to all of the content already being shared on Fediverse be sufficient incentive on its own? It's free content for their users, promoting their users to engage on their system.

@aintist

It only takes several days of floor time if the rest of the Senate puts up with it.
They can vote to skip the floor time at any point.

Such suspension of the standing rules is common enough when the Senate wants to get something done.
@MJmusicinears @samhainnight

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