Comment on
They lived in harmony until they remembered they forgot to eat and got bitchy
Wait what’s support swapping?
Comment on
They lived in harmony until they remembered they forgot to eat and got bitchy
Wait what’s support swapping?
Comment on
They're so spacious
Reply in thread
Yeah you’re gonna need to start quoting your sources.
Comment on
Social Media are drugs and their CEOs are billionaire drug dealers
Reply in thread
If it's not a social media then neither is Reddit
Correct
Look right now we're even arguing about semantics just like any good social media
Semantics matter when they’re being used to restrict your rights. The current “definition” of social media was spread by a person trying to get a business degree, and they just made up a definition that happens to include pretty much the entirety of the internet. Newscasters that didn’t know any better started calling anything that made it to the news “social media” even though we had a perfectly fine definition before that. Forums existed long before social media did, forums are not social media, and both Lemmy and Reddit are forums of forums, not social media.
Don’t get me wrong, Reddit is terrible. But so is 4chan and I don’t think anyone is calling 4chan social media.
Comment on
Social Media are drugs and their CEOs are billionaire drug dealers
Reply in thread
Yep and that definition includes every website on the planet. It’s a completely useless definition, spread by newscasters that have no clue what they’re talking about, completely diluting the term and making it so that lawmakers can pass laws restricting ALL of your rights on the internet but making citizens think only a subset are being affected.
For example both Amazon, Alibaba, GM’s blog, and news sites meet that definition.
That definition does nothing to describe social media except help the government restrict your rights.
Comment on
Supportive rule
Y’all have toxic friends.
Comment on
Social Media are drugs and their CEOs are billionaire drug dealers
Reply in thread
Lemmy is a forum, not social media. It has none of the hallmarks of social media, and is only alike in the fact that you talk to other people, which is literally the entire point of the internet in the first place.
Edit: I decided to write this up since I argue this all the time.
Short argument for those that don't care and just want to argue:
Long argument:
Forums have existed long before social media. Social media derived from social networking, sites like SixDegrees.com, MySpace, AOL, Facebook, etc. An example of a pure social networking site is LinkedIn. The elements that make it social networking:
Social media spread from social networking. People realized they could talk on a global scale rather than just with their friends and acquaintances. Twitter popped up. Most people still used their real names, but many used anonymous tags. It was still predominantly random topics to 'keep in touch' but with followers rather than acquaintances. Then Instagram. Still random topics, purpose is still to connect with others, except now it's sharing things on a wider scale.
Notice how none of these things are things you do on a forum. You use anonymous usernames and the main purpose is talking about a shared topic, getting help, etc. not random daily posts, checkins etc. Forums are targeted discussions. You don't follow other users, you don't know them personally (knowing them personally is not the reason for being on the platform), you have no network graph, and they have existed for decades without being breeding grounds for the terrible things that have emerged from social media sites where fake news can spread like wildfire.
What does this all lead to? Well imagine that society decides that soda is bad and needs to be regulated (already happened in many countries). So the government decides that they're going to ban children from drinking soda. Yay! Oh wait, but the government has decided that soda actually is "any drink with flavoring and/or bubbles in it". Oh dang. You just banned every drink on the planet, yet citizens think that children have only been banned from drinking soda. Nope. No more water, milk, tea, coffee, literally nothing is drinkable by children anymore.
That's what's happening with social media. Social media has become such a broad term, that it covers every website (essentially) on the planet.
Here's the Australian Age Restriction law definition of 'social media':
- The sole purpose, or a significant purpose, of the service is to enable online social interaction between two or more end-users.
- The service allows end-users to link to, or interact with, some or all of the other end-users.
- The service allows end-users to post material on the service.
- The service has a 'recommender feature' and/or 'logged in feature' as defined in the Rules.
- Material on the service is accessible to, or delivered to, end-users in Australia.
This means that Stack Overflow, a help forum for software developers, is Social Media. This definition includes News websites that have comment sections (all of them). This definition includes any website where you can talk to another human being, for example a car forum or a microcontroller forum. This definition literally includes Amazon for fucks sake. What would Amazon be without customer reviews? Well according to this definition they wouldn't be Social Media.
You might say "those types of sites don't have recommender or logged in features", well the "'recommender feature' and/or 'logged in feature'" rule is doing a hell of a lot of lifting here, let's look at what it has to say:
(1) For the purposes of paragraph 63C(1)(a)(iv) of the Act, it is a condition that the service has either or both of:
(a) a recommender feature;
(b) a logged‑in feature.
Recommender feature
(2) A service has a recommender feature if the service can:
(a) select material by reference to any information that the service has associated with an end‑user’s account; and
(b) display that material to the end‑user while the end‑user is using the service.
Logged‑in features
(3) A service has a logged‑in feature if the service:
(a) has one or more of the following features:
(i) an endless‑feed feature;
(ii) a feedback feature; or
(iii) a time‑limited feature; and
(b) does not enable an end‑user to access, or be exposed to, at least one such feature unless the end‑user is using the service with an account.
(4) A service has an endless‑feed feature if the service can display material to an end‑user:
(a) in a feed of material that has no end‑point; or
(b) in a feed of material that has an end‑point, but to which additional material is added:
(i) when that end‑point is reached; or
(ii) at time intervals; or
(iii) in response to the end‑user’s input.
(5) A service has a feedback feature if the service can display information to an end‑user about:
(a) the extent to which other end‑users have viewed or otherwise engaged with material posted by the end‑user on the service; or
(b) the extent to which other end‑users have opted to receive notifications about the end‑user’s account or material posted by the end‑user on the service.
(6) A service has a time‑limited feature if the service enables an end‑user to view material that is available to be viewed on the service only within a limited period after it has been posted.
Alright so 2(a), literally just means showing anything to a user based on history. So if you turn on the setting to hide read posts on Lemmy then Lemmy immediately would apply here.
On news sites they use cookies to track you so you don't even need to be logged in for this to happen, and there's no rule here stating that it has to be end-user created material so all news sites with comment sections would meet this requirement if they do anything with a cookie or geo location or anything like that.
For the car forum example you might say "forums don't really track things", well that's where you get into the "Logged-in features" section, 3(a)(i); an endless‑feed feature. 3(b) states "does not enable an end‑user to access, or be exposed to, at least one such feature unless the end‑user is using the service with an account." well that's posting, so any forum automatically meets that, so what is an endless feed?
(4) A service has an endless‑feed feature if the service can display material to an end‑user: (b) in a feed of material that has an end‑point, but to which additional material is added: (iii) in response to the end‑user’s input.
great. So clicking the next button at the bottom of the forum page to go to the next page counts as an "endless feed".
Australia is a fantastic example of people thinking the government is enacting one law when in reality they are enacting a law that will regulate every part of society. Australia is moving slowly to not alarm people, but the law does affect these other websites, they just don't realize it yet.
To be clear, there is no way to regulate the social media that people think is bad versus any other social media, according to these random definitions. If you see someone trying to regulate social media, or someone stating that social media applies to forums, you should scream and yell and make as much noise as possible, because all they are trying to do is regulate the entire internet to remove your speech.
I've been warning about this for years and everything I've warned about is already coming true. As long as people continue to claim that Reddit and Lemmy are social media the problem will only get worse. The problem isn't talking to others online. It's these massive corporations that use algorithms to manipulate you. The commonality here isn't "talking to people". It's $$$.
Comment on
xkcd #3262: Sports Commentary
Reply in thread
... how were there "literally comments all over this thread" talking about other countries when I first commented, if I was the first to comment.
Comment on
They're so spacious
Reply in thread
... with trucks... that weigh hundreds of HUNDREDS of thousands of pounds less than a train (literally just the locomotive weighs 400 THOUSAND pounds/200 short tons, even a land train in australia has a maximum weight of 164 short tons). It's like saying "why don't bicycles have seatbelts when cars are required to". The car seatbelts are for collisions with other things at speed. A bike/car collision at 90 degrees is much more worrisome for the bike than the car.
Comment on
How do you avoid AI music?
Reply in thread
How would they pay less royalties? That AI music is still being uploaded by someone.
Comment on
Boys, don't dev alone or you'll end up with a git log like mine
Reply in thread
Whoever works that job after you leave is going to curse your family lol. That’s wild to think like that.
Comment on
xkcd #3262: Sports Commentary
Reply in thread
I was the first comment in the whole thread…
Comment on
They're so spacious
Reply in thread
Trains don’t take 90° turns, nor have other trains hit them at 90° angles.
Comment on
They're so spacious
Reply in thread
They’re much more unsafe than bucket seats. Someone up above in the thread details it more.
Comment on
xkcd #3262: Sports Commentary
I’ve complained about this for years. This is only in America btw. In other countries they just watch and don’t care about the statistics.
Comment on
Boys, don't dev alone or you'll end up with a git log like mine
Reply in thread
--force-with-lease though, not just force.. It's a good habit to have because then when you are working with other people you won't fuck everything up.
Comment on
Stuck in the machine
Reply in thread
You’re mentioning one city, talking about needing money to live there. The entire continent of Europe is like the op’s post. Not just southern Europe and not just cities. And you don’t need to be rich to live there.
Comment on
Boys, don't dev alone or you'll end up with a git log like mine
Reply in thread
I'm very confused haha. didn't you say this code was just personal code? or that it was just for yourself? If you're at a job why are you committing like this?
in any case, I'm sorry for the absolute crazy amounts of hate you're getting for using windows. I do highly recommend trying out linux though. unless you're doing cad or 3d modeling, you will likely have zero issue using it.
Comment on
Boys, don't dev alone or you'll end up with a git log like mine
Reply in thread
then just always force push. You're not even using the source control, you might as well just use a shell script to deploy rather than listening on CI/CD
Comment on
WhatsApp's "End-to-End Encryption" Is the Biggest Lie in Tech History
Comment on
Researchers used math to crack Wordle
Uhh. Yeah that’s how you play the game. wtf is this news?? lol