Well there are parts we can compare and parts we can't.
For example, we can look at the overall design, how user accounts are managed, and see how different it is from how ActivityPub manages user accounts.
Yep, we'll have to wait to see how other parts compare as they shape up, but at least we can look at the parts of the design that have been publicly outlined.
Ha, well, there are two sides to this, objective and subjective. And please read the following in the lighthearted tone I mean it.
Objectively, it would take so much work to add in the features missing from ActivityPub, the user-empowering stuff, because AP is just that focused to the core on instances.
Subjectively, my personal opinion, AP is so ugly, so badly designed, so bloated and inefficient in its use of layer after layer of kludged-in standard, that I'm happy to throw it overboard.
I say this to respond to your strikes me as odd statement. To me, it doesn't strike me as odd at all, as from my perspective the alternative is a lot of work to maybe have new features sort of function in a system that's not work keeping in the first place.
And now to go take a vehicle to a mechanic to try to salvage a car that, if I'm being honest, is really not work keeping in the first place :)
I think you overlook the existence of voters in the US system of government.
Stories of purchasing elections have been generally debunked as nothing more than conspiracy theory.
Keep in mind that there's absolutely nothing preventing ads on a ActivityPub instance or even being sent through the network.
Your instance can start showing you ads this very second if it wanted to. Heck, I could even reply to this thread with an ad :)
Bluesky is still in development. I expect that once it's ironed out there will be federating instances (or whatever they call nodes).
We will see, though.
@uniquitous @RogueLodge @hakirsch
But what of Bluesky's focus on users over instances?
One reason I'm interested in Bluesky is precisely BECAUSE I really care about decentralized media and was disappointed that ActivityPub centralized around instances.
@supernovae@universeodon.com Well, populations have grown, markets have grown, and there's really only so much that managers can do to scale.
If a CEO (well, his staff) is receiving 100 letters a day one year and then 1000 letters a day a few years later, the secretary only has the same number of hours in the day.
So much in the world is about matters of scale, scaling up or down.
@rolle, thanks for sharing this link to a one paragraph summary of #Bluesky 's reason for existing.
Although I would push back that things like increased portability means LESS control, not more.
@uniquitous @RogueLodge @hakirsch
The problem is that ActivityPub has some real deficiencies built into its core, that can't be simply extended away.
To address those issues--ranging from privacy through the focus on instances over users--requires an incompatible protocol.
The concern I have is that the reduced scrutiny meant less people involved to give input and point out weaknesses in the design of the system.
ActivityPub has some serious deficiencies, for example when it comes to privacy, decentralization, and resource usage.
Had there been more scrutiny and eyes on the development, maybe we wouldn't now be saddled with those issues.
Yes. Congress can impeach him if our democratic process comes to the conclusion that he's misbehaved in office.
Fortunately cooler heads will probably prevail.
It sounds like you're trying so, so hard to deflect from the simple matter of law that was before the court here.
The FDA broke the law.
Oh, but the drug later developed a track record--but the FDA broke the law.
Oh, but we really should let women access this drug--but the FDA broke the law.
Oh, but the politics--the FDA broke the law.
You seem to keep throwing up these other issues that are completely irrelevant as to the actual question the court was asked to answer here.
Did the FDA break the law? None of this other stuff changes the answer to that question.
Ha! As if proprietary protocols aren't a thing?
Yes, a protocol is a protocol even if you yourself haven't been assisted in joining the party yet.
Again, read the monthly report and you'll see that the Treasury doesn't operate year by year.
The Treasury collects money every day and spends money every day, so it's about the day's tax revenues vs the day's spending, and they update their balances every day.
So when the Treasury has a debt to pay today, it doesn't think about different years. It looks at what its balance is today and it spends what has come in.
It's exactly like your own bank account. When your electricity bill is due, you write a check out of your account that day, you don't go look into the account for some particular year, I'm guessing.
Did you read Dred Scott? That is not what they said.
You didn't notice the captions showing that those were monthly collections?
The Treasury collects money throughout the year. The link I sent you was really clear about that since it laid out the income monthly.
If you didn't realize that the Treasury collects revenues literally every day of the week, every week of the year, you might have noticed that in the link that I provided.
This case is happening in a court of law. There's no pretending, this is about law, and the question before the legal court is whether the FDA obeyed the law.
It's really weird that you are citing law in the course of saying this is pretending to be a legal case.
Honestly at this point I don't know what you are talking about. You seem to be striving to make some points that is just really outside of the record, outside of the facts of this case.
Page 4 answers your question with a nice graph illustrating sources of Treasury's revenues.
The tables below go into detail, but yeah, mostly tax revenues that are remitted to the Treasury throughout the year.
That gets it backwards, though: the 14th doesn't grant the president power to borrow money without authorization; rather it requires him to use the money *already in the Treasury* to service debts first.
The Treasury has plenty of money to service its debts without raising the debt ceiling, just based on existing receipts and federal holdings.
To even talk about defaulting on those debts is political brinkmanship.
Well that's not true, and here I'll link to a copy of the Treasury's Monthly Statement that I was skimming through, where you can see for yourself how it works.
The Treasury receives revenues throughout the year and also spends throughout the year. It takes in plenty enough to pay for past spending, so according to the US Treasury the debt ceiling doesn't need to be raised to pay for past spending.
It all goes back to what I said: the president wants more power to borrow. That's fair, but in requesting that power he'd need to meet Congress half way to get the authority.
https://www.fiscal.treasury.gov/files/reports-statements/mts/mts0323.pdf
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 ;)