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Just heard this during meeting:

"feeding two birds with one scone"

Beautiful alternative to this shared linguistic violence:

jakubmarian.com/wp-content/upl

@aw I think that can definitely be a problem, but I also think it overestimates the relative importance of the engineering side of software development.

Ultimately I would say that the deciding factor in how software gets developed is less the circumstances of the engineers, and more the interests of those funding it - developers build 'global platforms' because investors demand that they do, because that is how you monopolize a market and claim back the 'investment' tenfold. The relative social isolation of engineers, to me, seems more consequence than cause.

There are certainly tech companies, for instance, that work mostly/entirely remote, but that are still closely engaged with the needs of their communities. But... they are small companies, not VC-funded, not trying to make billions, and they don't come up in global headlines.

Hmm, just realised that Debian Bullseye (and older) doesn’t include the ISRG Root X2 certificate by default, and apparently Debian doesn’t update the ‘ca-certificates’ package for older releases.

Can’t seem to find a built-in way to update this easily, but perhaps I am missing something; is there a built-in way to deploy an updated Mozilla root certificate bundle without building custom packages, manually pulling a package from testing or unstable, adding the newer ones as local certificates and whatnot?

I know how to do the latter, am aware of the documented options, just wondering if I’m overlooking something obvious.

Thanks!

@sabogato I've seen it used by governments and government-adjacent nonprofits in the context of 'digital sovereignty' - where it seems to mostly refer to not being dependent on other nations for digital infrastructure.

I wouldn't consider that directly right-wing, though it is definitely often (but not always) statist or nationalist in nature.

My wife has joined a Facebook group, specifically for people all pretending to be ants. What a weird, but utterly harmless, corner of the internet.

unsolicited advice 

@hazelnot @schratze (Usually the trick is to have any necessary CUPS package for IPP Everywhere installed, and use a printer that does either that or AirPrint - then it'll work every time without needing printer-specific drivers. But this is barely documented anywhere)

CW meta, personal pondering 

Feedback on this is welcome, btw, as long as you don't try to trivialize the concern

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CW meta, personal pondering 

Considering a new personal policy where I explicitly CW-tag any 'bad world stuff' as "non-actionable" unless there's an actionable thing included with it, though I'm concerned about that demotivating people from trying to find actionable solutions themselves

frustration, programming, package management 

There's this really frustrating dynamic where "lots of single-purpose libraries" is very clearly the optimal model once you do a full technical analysis, but it doesn't *feel* that way.

Because what people remember of this model is "having to wade through hundreds of packages to find what I need and getting list".

Which wouldn't be a problem in a correct implementation of this model (where you provide a pre-bundled/pre-configured collection for the common case and clear documentation on what you need) - but in a correct implementation, most people would never interact with the underlying hundred libraries, and so they will never perceive it as an example of the "many small libraries" model to begin with!

Do it wrong and it'll be a bad example of the model, do it right and it won't be seen as an example of the model at all. Damned if you do, damned if you don't.

(See: npm, OpenStack, ...)

yo
now that #FediPact is (justifyingly) returning to the conversation
consider giving some money to @vantablack who helped coordinate all of this

cyberpunk.lol/@vantablack/1120

#Meta #Facebook #Threads

generative AI is exciting to business because it's a way to blend up the commons and get something that generates profit while deferring responsibility

it can be exciting to you for other reasons but i really need you all to be clear-headed about why it's being hyped up and funded so much

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thinking about Copilot again, for reasons

and like. i've heard a lot of arguments back and forth about whether or not it's actually a breach of GPL to include GPL'd code in the training set of an inference model; I think it is, Microsoft thinks it isn't, i'm not going to sue them about it

but it seems very hard for me to see how people don't see the creation of Copilot as a tremendous breach of developer goodwill and the social contract of open source

Motion picture distribution and productuon companies have always been a hotbed for scams, financial shenanigans, and outright fraud.

The boom in independent cinema of the 60s and 70s was a tax dodge.

The death of modern film is down to financial shenanigans. It has nothing to do with consumers or demand or art, and it certainly has nothing to do with Markets. It's about consolidation of capital and financial shenanigans.

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Greta kicking ass on a Twitter screenshot 

:solidarity: :commie:

Greta tried the "the system is broken we should fix it" route and ended up where we all do, "the system is exactly as it was planned and we need something better"

H/T
@OccuWorld syzito.xyz/@OccuWorld/11212499

I’m going to Essen (last Belgian station) on this “Intercity” but there is an hourly train to Roosendaal that crosses the border. But it’s a Regional that stops in every tiny place, and is operated with a knackered 1970s EMU

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