@TCatInReality that's not how the appeals process works, though.
The Court isn't refusing to defend the 1st Amendment since the lower court hasn't yet completed work to see if there's a 1st Amendment issue here in the first place.
The Supreme Court hasn't had a full briefing on this case, so it would be inappropriate for it at this moment to interfere in the lower court's work by making such a claim.
They didn't choose to allow suppression to stand. Instead, they chose to allow the constitutional process to address allegations of suppression.
Again, not a single justice filed a dissent saying that this was allowing suppression to stand.
This is how the legal process works in the US, and for good reasons.
@SinclairSpeccy the funny thing is I wasn't sure what you meant by decent word count.
Some people around here consider long posts to be positively indecent :)
Anyway, assuming you mean you'd like an instance with a high limit and you'd like to stick to Mastodon instead of going to something like Friendica, this instance qoto.org has a very high character limit.
@SpaceLifeForm there are a lot of problems with threading posts like that.
They range from simple issues of some clients doing a bad job of formatting them for display through severe issues of accessibility.
Not to mention, on the creator's side they constrain what the author might want to do, forcing them to chop up paragraphs to work for the technology instead of having the technology work for them and their intentions.
We really need to move technology forward and stop accepting such echos of the past.
Any idea if there's an issue opened on #Mastodon to fix this on their end?
My quick search didn't find anyone mentioning this ignoring of the #ActivityPub standard for flagging images.
@m Thanks for sharing!
That does a pretty good job of capturing just how annoyingly thorny that problem is.
Implementing a “Share on Mastodon” button for a blog
Normally, adding a share button to a blog is a trivial task. In case of Mastodon, it is complicated by the fact that you need to choose your home instance. And it is further complicated if you decide to support further Fediverse applications beyond …
https://palant.info/2023/10/19/implementing-a-share-on-mastodon-button-for-a-blog/
@remixtures the critical point is that this doesn't mean trusted third parties are required.
ETFs can help serve as anchors for Bitcoin, similar to interest rates, but they're optional, with users free to take advantage of them or not as they feel like.
It's nice to see such an anchor emerge, as it has positive implications for the operation of the currency, so the good vibes from the SEC decision are rational.
@tom I'm under the impression that AP groups aren't well documented simply because they're still rather theoretical.
Which is to say, in the abstract, people talk about group functionality, but it means different things to different people, folks haven't really settled on how they are supposed to behave, the semantics of them, etc.
In the protocol itself we can see the bits that would enable that functionality, but we haven't really reached a consensus on how it would/should translate from bits to user experience.
And part of the problem is that when groups run up against popular UIs that aren't ready to deal with them, it can really blow up the user experience, so it's hard to develop that incrementally.
@CSB@noauthority.social this is wrong, though.
Firstly, with Bitcoin itself, there are ways built in to the technology to enable wallet recovery. If people aren't using those mechanisms, well, that's a different matter.
Secondly, even beyond Bitcoin, in modern finance we certainly have solved these problems with things like insurance and custodial relationships.
There are other reasons Bitcoin doesn't catch on, but this isn't it.
@Free_Press I always love when a report quotes someone complaining about out of context quoting, but does so in an piece with out of context quotes.
@TCatInReality that's just not accurate, and here's a link to the plaintiff's plea so you can read for yourself.
Not only did the lower courts agree to hear the case, but they were *still in the process of hearing* the case.
So the Supreme Court merely said they'd let the normal process work through, as is normal and constitutional.
That there wasn't a single dissent registered against the SCOTUS decision is a good indication that many of the sensational stories about this are false.
@ScottLucas I can try to rephrase: I have many criticisms of the SOTU presentation on infrastructure and the economy, but one of the core criticisms is that Biden's presentation didn't work toward consensus that would actually lead to the implementation of his proposals.
By sticking with positions that have already been long-rejected by groups outside his base, Biden's speed didn't work to bring over supporters that he'd need to actually do what he was proposing.
And that's regardless of whether they were good ideas or not--a much bigger question.
This is why it's so noteworthy that he delivered a stump speech at the SOTU address.
As for supporting Trump, no, I do everything I can to point out what a defective candidate he has been.
@TCatInReality Well right, because that's how the US judicial system is set up.
It's not the legislative branch. The place to handle that sort of concern is in the other branch of government.
This is the judicial branch where the system is set up to take time, let lower courts debate and explore issues before overtime raising them to the upper court.
It is absolutely reasonable, given the design of the US system, that the Supreme Court would be much more interested in taking on established rights, as that sits roll in the government.
@julie sure.
You're responding to a comment where a person just slings mud at the court without any particular argument or outlining of a disagreement or anything else, just a profanity. It's not useful.
So when you ask now what, I agree, what is going on?
And the answer is that here is a person who is just slinging mud on social media without any particular understanding of the court or current events.
And I think it's worth calling such people out for the toxic influences that they are on society.
Anyone saying something like fuck scotus is someone to be called out for being negative, someone looking to tear down based on their own misunderstanding of the world, not a serious person, and it's really antisocial.
But this is social media. That is pretty common around here.
These days the phrase "you can't make this stuff up" is so overused that really it comes across as,
Oh no, I CAN make this stuff up, and I can make a lot of other stuff up too.
You can't?
Are you really so low functioning that this is beyond your imagination?
Well that explains a lot of the other dumb ideas you have.
You can't make this stuff up has become a brag from people who, well, honestly probably aren't smart enough to make such things up on their own.
@julie now another person posts a well reasoned and articulate argument to social media.
Oh wait, no, they just throw some mud about something they probably don't know anything about.
Carry on.
@ScottLucas you asked about the administration's record. Well, the record is really pretty awful, an administration that is failing to accomplish the goals of the departments under its perview as it is, much less as it might be if we gave the president even more power.
So specifically, I was pointing out that the national labs have suffered tremendous degradation under this administration, with new rules coming down that interfere with the scientific missions.
And they want more power? After they're screwing up what they already have to do?
This is a pretty big deal.
We need to call out Biden for being a disaster and not give him the more power that he is requesting in his ridiculous State of the Union address.
That the address provoked chants of four more years just highlighted what a ridiculous campaign speech it was instead of a speech that could actually lead to consensus to drive his policies forward.
@SteveThompson perhaps so.
But I fear that a lot of the misleading stuff is also symptomatic of intentional editorial decision. It seems that reporters have flat out said they would put their fingers on the scales for the sake of promoting their causes.
But either way, it doesn't really matter why, whether they are lazy or intentionally wrong, it has the same effect of misleading the public and needing to be called out.
Hanlon's Razor doesn't really matter when it has the same effect.
@ScottLucas I'm not talking about the administration's record, even though I have enormous issues with it and the harm that the administration has done particularly to things like science and the national labs.
The national labs are having tremendous problems operating under this administration because of their dictates. And I really want to bring more attention to that because this administration has been terrible for science.
But what I'm trying to highlight is how the SOTU stood up as a stump speech that failed to address the larger country as it must if Biden wants to actually implement any of his proposals.
You might love what the guy is pushing for, but that's even more reason to bash him for a speech that will make it even harder for him to gain support for his proposals.
Everything is falling apart under this guy. We need to highlight that and get a different nominee.
@SteveThompson I don't honestly care whether journalism is lazy or not.
What I care about is journalism that is wrong and misleading.
If journalism is going to be lazy, fine, just say SpaceX launched a rocket and leave it at that. That's a really lazy take, but at least it is true.
The problem I have is when so many of our national outlets publish falsehoods. And I really want to call them out on that until they stop publishing falsehoods.
Laziness is fine. I mean it's not great, but it's ok.
The problem is with reporters broadcasting things that are flat out false, that the public ends up believing.
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 ;)