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Joined 3 months ago
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Cake day: June 25th, 2024

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  • At this point, even that would be preferable.

    Your right, any open platform will be bastardized eventually, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t still a need for “resets”.

    There is no perfect platform for escaping it, because the market forces will always adapt and assimilate. The only true escape is to keep moving.

    That’s why it’s important for users to be hermit crabs, and move to the next thing, no matter how janky, because they will at least be able to influence it positively and have a relatively open platform for a number of years. Then the cycle repeats.

    If propping up Linux phones will get us the open platform we need, even if only temporarily, we should do it.

    The issue I think is that the current trends in all consumer software are increasingly user hostile, and the major platforms are creating ecosystems to support this. It’s become the norm now to be able to directly control the usage of the software on consumer devices. Apple has normalized this, Google and Microsoft followed.

    At what point will developers refuse to even create software for a system that doesn’t allow them that control?

    Look at how many developers out there absolutely jerk themselves raw at the idea they should be able to compel users to update to continue using their software. Look at how many believe the modern security culture fallacy that handcuffing users and throwing away the key is the only way to protect them.

    It’s a development culture issue. Respecting user control of their own device is no longer in vogue.




  • I mean, you can be as snotty about this as you like, but it doesn’t change the fact this “choice” is basically between participate in the same digital world as most people do with the most popular, most supported, and highest value apps, vs only what you can use in F Droid or something?

    You’re calling them slaves but can you give them anything more appealing outside the walled garden than “privacy”? It’s not like everything on the play store has an F-Droid corollary. You’re basically telling them to dramatically reduce their own use case. Does that make them a slave?





  • doctortran@lemm.eetoTechnology@lemmy.worldSome basic info about USB
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    8 days ago

    It could be, but combine the color looking very much like Apple’s space grey, the slimness of it, particularly how slim the lid is versus the body, and what looks like the MacBook’s classic black, rounded rubber stoppers on the bottom, I think it’s safe to say that’s meant to be an MacBook.

    Also certain MacBook models tried to go to a single USB C port about a decade ago, and it was on the corner like that.





  • We learn by reading copyrighted material.

    We are human beings. The comparison is false on it’s face because what you all are calling AI isn’t in any conceivable way comparable to the complexity and versatility of a human mind, yet you continue to spit this lie out, over and over again, trying to play it up like it’s Data from Star Trek.

    This model isn’t “learning” anything in any way that is even remotely like how humans learn. You are deliberately simplifying the complexity of the human brain to make that comparison.

    Moreover, human beings make their own choices, they aren’t actual tools.

    They pointed a tool at copyrighted works and told it to copy, do some math, and regurgitate it. What the AI “does” is not relevant, what the people that programmed it told it to do with that copyrighted information is what matters.

    There is no intelligence here except theirs. There is no intent here except theirs.




  • For example, imagine a post where three users comment:

    One posts a heated stream of idiocy, falsehoods, and outright nastiness, thinly veiled bigotry and other garbage. Paragraphs of it, all poorly written.

    Another is some basic comment not saying anything of any real consequence. Completely mundane to the point no one has upvoted it, but it is perfectly harmless.

    The final is a comment with some meat on it and something to add to the conversation, but unfortunately they arrived too late to the thread. No one saw it, so no one upvoted it.

    Without downvotes, all three of these comments are treated exactly the same.

    I get downvotes can suck sometimes but they’re a valuable aspect to this system and removing them does not make the place better.

    I’d argue what people need to do if these things are genuinely bothering them is turn off the scores entirely and learn to live without them. It’s better for your mental health.


  • Will provide singular answers, with no sources, that no one else can see and therefore no one else can fact check, correct, or improve upon.

    Then, instead of being posted publicly for others to find and searches to index, those answers will disappear into the ether, so that no other users get that answer unless they too do an AI search from the same provider.

    And all of this at the expense of every website and content creator who no longer even gets seen in a search engine, let alone page views. At the expense of every writer whose words will never be seen, only thrown in a pile of words and remixed, then vomited back out. And at the expense not the environment that will suffer to power all of this wasteful, needless garbage.

    This is going to be a disaster for the internet as a whole, and it’s really sad how many people can’t understand this. Tech bros continue to fundamentally misunderstand what makes the internet valuable isn’t code, it isn’t “data”, it’s humans.