I usually get a reciept, but that’s because I like to scan/archive them and keep track of how prices change over time
Hey, thanks for reading my bio. You know, you’re pretty cool. I’m glad we got to share this moment together.
I usually get a reciept, but that’s because I like to scan/archive them and keep track of how prices change over time
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I was very on board with your comment until the Meyers-Briggs pseudoscience BS and then you lost me
Integrated multiplayer? Hell yeah
Neat idea, or, you could just tell them directly and be like “hey I’m not gonna respond here due to [reasons], come find me on signal if ya wanna chat”
People are usually more engaged when you communicate to them directly
Nah, its been becoming more popular, at least in my circles.
This is the one case where I’d make an exception. I read through the threads, it got particularly heated.
Life has gotten better since I dropped it. Moved a dozen or so people over to Signal and have been running with that ever since.
I do miss the ability to easily stream games, though.
Someone feel free to jump in and audit my take:
The Internet Archive is not a company, does not sell me anything, and is merely providing a public service.
The service has nothing to do with my health or wellbeing. It is not marketed as being privacy forward. Hell, the whole purpose of the project is to make data publically accessable.
Therefore, exposing email addresses… I kinda don’t care?
Of course, it would be way better if they just used generic login numbers etc instead, but… I feel like this is the equivalent of my library card number getting leaked, and these headlines are treating it like Equifax just leaked my SSN again.
I already subconsciously do this because I know it pisses them off, but I like your justification much better
No, closest thing is to join a datahoarder group and trade when needed.
Although with LinkWarden gaining popularity, something like this developing is a possibility.
No matter how you look at it, Wikipedia is one of the modern wonders of the world; those who maintain and defend it are doing holy work. The availability of free, high quality, publically indexed and equitably accessible information about our modern world is such an under-appreciated gift.
Education is a powerful tool, but when most people hear “knowledge is power” they think of personal success or political might. But its true power is on an evolutionary scale.
No other species in the history of our (known) universe has the capability to study the world, and then share those the conclusions to the next generation with high precision, like we do. It’s absolutely fascinating. It’s what sets us apart from the rest. It defines the human experience.
The reality is that the integrity of this mechanism (or rather, the democratization of said mechanism) is under threat. It always has been, but the nature of the threat has changed, and its scary. I’m glad it is being protected, at least for now.
I have no sympathy for those who attack and deface our libraries, whether they be physical or digital
I was like “oh, that’s a cute comic” and then I just started fucking wheezing
Yep. Its just another form of tribalism.
In a similar vein as Meyers-Briggs, Harry Potter houses, and every single buzzfeed quiz.
People are dynamic. We are the product of our experiences, not the position of the planets.
I remember the concern years ago was: since the application was bought (acquired?) and the tool was still publically free, that the new owners had added the spyware to try and monetize the data coming from said spyware/telemetry.
After reading your comment I went back and did some cursory searches, and it looks like the general concensus is that its less of a concern than it was originally - although, there is still uncertainty around how the tool is being monetized, which is enough for some to stop using it.
My exact experience finding out Audacity has adware
This is so stupid. God forbid they actually police their ads for malware. No, instead let’s push the responsibility onto the individual, by adding get another “Papers, Please”-esque stamp that very few people will know about and even less will actually use.
Hard pass. The day I saw them promoting malware above legitimate search results is the day I turned on ad blocking for my entire org, and a stupid little pay-to-verify badge isn’t going to change that.
/end rant
High kicks, high kicks