Maybe it's for the best that we don't look to unelected private actors, particularly those with power over finances and abilities to act as gatekeepers to financial tools, to don the hats of police?
Yeah, when the bank owner isn't telling people what they can and can't do with their money, some people will do bad things with it.
But that's for law enforcement to address through transparent channels that respect due process. It shouldn't be for Jack Dorsey to go vigilante and take the law into his own hands.
Coffee, but my personal anecdotes are hardly significant.
These articles are about people #Bitcoin mining, right? Every one of those miners is an adopter who is not only engaging in trade using Bitcoin but is finding the currency so valuable that they're willing to pay both fixed and variable costs to acquire more.
The narratives complaining about Bitcoin mining are necessarily highlighting the adoption and value of the system.
It reminds me of the old line: Nobody goes there anymore--it’s too crowded.
But that just goes for another round of the same.
Sure, it's not useful for transactions, except for all of the times when it is, it's not useful for remittances, except when it is, etc.
It really comes across as gaslighting when folks insist on the nonexistence of what we see with our own eyes.
The news of zero adoption is quite surprising to all of the adopters.
It's a ridiculous argument, amounting to, Except for all of the benefits, there is only cost!
It does drive clicks, I suppose.
But this argument seems to miss the very importance of the network effect, so it comes across as both circular and Pollyannish.
The network effect drives growth and provides value. Heck yeah, that's the thing the successful platforms have going for them, but to say Fediverse will match that value once it has lots of people misses that without first having that value it will have trouble attracting those lots of people.
It's like saying the only thing dollars have over Bitcoin is that they're accepted so broadly.
Well... yeah.
*shrug* the owner feels like those voters need to be called out for their role in electing the guy.
That's not a positive sentiment, but it's not orders of magnitude different from criticizing the politician voters elected.
Heck, maybe we need a little more focus on the responsibilities of voters in this democratic system.
It's almost as if these proceedings are doing little but playing into Trump's hands.
Right, but that you were surprised by this outcome means you were wrong about something, and if I were in your position, I'd do some self-examination to figure out where I was wrong.
If you were wrong about this, I'd be wondering what else you are wrong about, and how you could have gotten to that point during those years of advocacy.
I'd say that even if he is arrested, still not worth the energy.
Seriously, the more attention we give to the loser the more it plays into his sticking around.
If he's arrested then fine. Let the cops deal with him. Let's go focus on more important things.
Meh. Stupid state government deciding that stupid state government should do stupid things.
The key is just to recognize how stupid the government is and ignore it, as it's just a stupid institution being stupid, and the less room it takes up in our minds the better.
It's because such a law would be undemocratic.
If voters decide to vote for such a person, then that's how the election has worked out, and it would be problematic to overrule the democratic vote because the government doesn't accept its outcome.
Given the likely charges against him, Trump wouldn't be subject to bail anyway.
I'd say there are two independent but interrelated issues here: artist/author/creator intent and reader preference and empowerment.
Both are important.
As a writer, it matters to me to keep my work and personal personas separate for both practical and philosophical reasons. I'm a strong supporter of people having multiple accounts to match how they wish to have separate personas on social media. That's empowering of creators.
As a reader, I want to be able to shape my experience here and control what content is presented, and that's separate from the personas of people I follow.
That's where hashtags come in. On Fediverse, that seems to be the best way for readers to have power to get the experience they want.
So: accounts for personas and hashtags. They empower content creators and consumers, respectively. And they help empower us all on this platform.
Honestly, this was a pretty predictable result, so if you're shocked by it, perhaps you should reconsider whoever you're listening to for information about the Supreme Court.
There's so much misinformation out there these days, so much of it about SCOTUS.
What in the world?
Have you listened to much of the Federalist Society's content? They spent an awful lot of time rebuking "Christian right nationalist agenda!"
When you actually listen to them, so many of them seem to take particular joy in sticking it to exactly that sort of person.
tl;dr: All that cool new stuff you want in the Fediverse already exists in the Fediverse, right outside of Mastodon
code blocks etc. Would be great if Mastodon had that, in spite of other people saying they don't want it.uspol,reproduction
It wasn't really an abortion case at this point.
Rather it was just a matter of court procedure, with the Supreme Court agreeing to the position taken by the minor's own side and Jackson saying the Court should have opposed the motion to dismiss even though both sides agreed to it.
Above you asked, "Why should it bother anyone if Mastodon is the gateway"?
Here you admonish not to gatekeep.
Well, I think you're stumbling into an answer to your own question.
@thatguy
What I know to be in the lightweight category are:
* #Akkoma (fork of Pleroma)
* #Rebased (fork of Pleroma)
* #Pleroma itself
* #GoToSocial
There are also the following in the middleweight category:
* #Calckey (fork of Misskey)
* #Foundkey (fork of Misskey)
* #Misskey itself
* #groundpolis (fork of Misskey)
You can find a great list here: https://codeberg.org/fediverse/delightful-fediverse-apps For example, maybe a writing-centric platform might be more fitting (depending on what you have in mind).
@chrisg@aus.social
This has been another of those cases where someone's quote gets mangled and the edited version gets a life of its own.
Even with the edited version of the quote in the article DeSantis didn't say the US shouldn't continue supporting Ukraine.
It's a big ol' strawman, but yes, one that many outfits have jumped on to drive drama and clicks.
I think the most pressing and fundamental problem of the day is that people lack a practically effective means of sorting out questions of fact in the larger world. We can hardly begin to discuss ways of addressing reality if we can't agree what reality even is, after all.
The institutions that have served this role in the past have dropped the ball, so the next best solution is talking to each other, particularly to those who disagree, to sort out conflicting claims.
Unfortunately, far too many actively oppose this, leaving all opposing claims untested. It's very regressive.
So that's my hobby, striving to understanding the arguments of all sides at least because it's interesting to see how mythologies are formed but also because maybe through that process we can all have our beliefs tested.
But if nothing else, social media platforms like this are chances to vent frustrations that on so many issues both sides are obviously wrong ;)