in general i try not to dunk but i can't believe that this is something that a mozilla tech lead actually wrote down about the nearly silent introduction of an aggregated advertising system into a browser that is plastered wall to wall in its promotional materials as being dedicated solely to privacy
@jonny This is so reminiscent of my conversations with the folks responsible for shutting down the Mozilla IRC network.
Constantly repeating the same unsupported platitudes (like "ads keep the web running") as if they are an automatic justification that is beyond criticism, without ever actually engaging with the concern being raised.
(In that case, they were originally entertaining moving their official channels to a proprietary platform like Slack or Discord. I was told point blank that the openness of the platform was not a consideration, only the operational complexity was.)
I think that everyone who cares about the health of the web should probably read some of the posts around here, if it is representative of the attitudes of the mozilla development team at all https://mastodon.social/@Schouten_B/112784434152717689
personally I think the MONA thing is hilarious, especially in the context of the Discourse.
for non-Australians, the Museum of Old and New Art (MONA) in Tasmania had an area called the Ladies Lounge, where men were not allowed. They hung several fake Picassos, an antique mink rug that was actually polyester, and a bunch of fake tribal spears. The idea was that it was a criticism of the general idea of the patriarchy where men typically have a lot more opportunities for... pick a thing. Even when women were allowed in, what was actually inside were cheap replicas devoid of any amount of authenticity. It's ripping on token inclusion.
In an eye-watering display of self-awareness deficiency, a man then sued MONA for not being allowed in, claiming discrimination due to being a man. He claimed that as he had paid admission to the whole of MONA but was not permitted to this specific exhibit due to his gender, he was being discriminated against.
The Tasmanian Civil Tribunal agreed, and MONA was directed to admit men into a women's-only area. The irony is thick enough that you could cut it with a knife.
MONA, in response, dismantled the exhibit except for the fake Picassos. All the bathrooms at MONA are single-occupancy all-gender, but it turns out having a women's bathroom from which men are excluded *isn't* discriminatory, so they converted one into a women's bathroom and hung the fake Picassos in there, an exhibit of itself.
The art exhibit was basically a criticism of "turns out the only safe space for women away from men is a bathroom, and people will still claim that you're getting special rights because you get to see something nobody else can. Even if what you're seeing is a cheap replica, someone somewhere will claim that you have it good because you're getting something they don't."
Picasso's estate, however, took a rather dim view of unauthorised replicas being displayed in an art gallery in Tasmania, even though it was literally years between putting up the artwork and someone noticing. They've since been taken down with no further action.
MONA has declared that the Ladies Lounge will return as something where S26 of the Sex Discrimination Act doesn't apply, such as a church or boutique glamping experience.
They've also expressly stated that the Ladies Lounge includes ALL women, not just cis ones.
I love everything about this story. Fucking classic stuff coming out of the art world.
If you really wanted to "democratize creativity" you'd argue for every human being to have paid time off to find, follow and develop their creativity, their perspective and their voice.
Creativity is the work that allows people to bring forth their own selves regardless of who pays for it. It's part of the essence of being human.
We know that many people just don't get the resources, the freedom, the time to explore that part of being human. And we're all poorer for it.
transphobia, rowling, streeting, dehumanisation
A phrase I use often - you've probably seen me use it before - is "the characteristic reductiveness of bigotry".
When I use it, it means trans people are seen as only trans, and not as anything else.
And it's why JK Rowling can get away with attacking rape survivors, and it's why Wes Streeting can get away with attacking kids. The 'trans' qualifier is used to obscure membership of those other cohorts, as a justification for that heinous, evil cruelty.
Research by UK LGBT+ young people's charity Just Like Us showed that people who know a trans person are nearly twice as likely to support trans-inclusive policies, while, conversely, nearly three quarters of those who don't support trans-inclusive policies don't know anyone trans: https://www.justlikeus.org/blog/2023/03/31/trans-day-of-visibility-ally-lesbian/
If you know a trans person, you cannot reduce them to being 'only' trans. You have no choice but to see them as a person. It is unsurprising that cruelty dissipates in the face of that.
Early on in my journey I decided that convincing people that "trans women are women" or that "trans men are men" was secondary to convincing them that "trans people are people," and that, years later, depressingly remains true.
@mattgrayyes@chaos.social @eta Err, correction, Embedded theme*, not Royale Blue; that one was lighter!
@mattgrayyes@chaos.social @eta I think it's Royale Blue? Obscure, but was actually an official Microsoft theme!
re: matrix, rant
@vidister@chaos.social I don't think that's really the case, to be honest. To be clear, I agree that the stewardship of the project has been very poor, and there are a lot of serious issues with both the protocol design and reference implementations. (There's a reason I've been working on a fork...)
But I was also there *before* Matrix became a Thing, and back then the federated messaging space was already in a very bad state, arguably worse than it is now - despite Matrix's issues, it *has* drawn in a whole new crop of folks interested in building out federated messaging systems.
I think a lot of it is going to come down to whether those folks have a more productive place to go, or whether everyone is going to be stuck in the swamp of Matrix bureaucracy under the current leadership forever. There are plenty of people who could make it better, but who just haven't been given the space to do so.
Huh TIL that Source's physics engine was implemented all the way back in 1999, they licensed Havok before it was even bought by Havok, it was called Ipion Virtual Physics at the time
Also apparently Source 2 ditched Havok for Valve's custom engine though, and I wonder how much of that is Valve building on top of Havok like Bethesda's Creation Engine building on top of Gamebryo, and how much is actually completely original
All of us who blocked Threads when they announced fediverse integration saw this.
We told you so.
https://www.macstories.net/stories/lgbt-and-marginalized-voices-are-not-welcome-on-threads/
@LordCaramac You seem to be missing the part where these systems are built on the backs of exploited artists who never got a say in the matter and labour exploitation in poor countries in particular.
Making labour exploitation more accessible is not a good thing, actually.
@spacehobo It is! I get people's old laptops given to me sometimes so I refurbish them and donate them onwards to a few local charities I'm in contact with.
I have 0 need for them, but a person being supported through homelessness can do a course and their admin on it if it can browse the web and do word processing still. There's simply too much tech out there now, and distributed all wrong
In the process of moving to @joepie91. This account will stay active for the foreseeable future! But please also follow the other one.
Technical debt collector and general hype-hater. Early 30s, non-binary, ND, poly, relationship anarchist, generally queer.
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Sometimes horny on main (behind CW), very much into kink (bondage, freeuse, CNC, and other stuff), and believe it or not, very much a submissive bottom :p
My spoons are limited, so I may not always have the energy to respond to messages.
Strong views about abolishing oppression, hierarchy, agency, and self-governance - but I also trust people by default and give them room to grow, unless they give me reason not to. That all also applies to technology and how it's built.