@mynameistillian Probably*
* subject to ADHD
long, browser musings
@freakazoid "I don't think we're going to convince people who are motivated because they want to have a specific piece of software themselves to make that software more usable for others."
Certainly, but they're not the people I'm talking about. I'm talking about the people who *already* have "building software for others" as the goal, but misunderstand the requirements to make that work in practice, often because they do not respect a diversity in needs.
"Threads has gained some power, but not really over instances that will never federate with them. Taking over Mastodon itself would be much harder to insulate oneself from."
Not really; it could be forked off (there are already several actively maintained Mastodon forks!) and people could just avoid the proprietary thing.
These scenarios really are functionally indistinguishable, and the reason is that the value of fedi isn't in the code; that's just a means to an end, relatively trivial for a company to replicate.
The value is in the community, and the power over it, and crucially, Eugen *does* have that in a highly centralized manner, and that's the primary cause we have this whole Threads mess to begin with. The code was never the issue, but that's the only thing copyleft can apply to.
long, browser musings
@freakazoid "Companies haven't been particularly successful fighting against copyleft legally."
This is an incorrect metric - you are judging the effectiveness of the mechanism by its theory of operation rather than its goal, and *of course* it is going to succeed by that metric, because you're measuring it against itself.
But the goal here wasn't "making it difficult to fight legally" - the goal here was to ensure user freedom, to guarantee control over one's own devices, and to prevent co-optation. The legal mechanism was just meant to be the way by which that was enforced.
It's been several decades now, and I think it is safe to say that this strategy has failed miserably: DRM everywhere, live services, everything is a subscription, GPL violations in embedded devices are extremely widespread, and devices are ever trending towards being more *closed*.
There are two major factors that have contributed to this, and both directly derive from the capitalist nature of copyleft's foundations (namely, copyright and the legal system):
1. Being in the right legally is worthless if you don't actually have the money to enforce that in court - and the offending parties are almost always the one with money, whereas the aggrieved parties are the ones without.
2. Copyleft is a legal hack, and its scope is constrained by what the law allows for, which isn't very much; and so almost all of the ways in which corporations enclose the commons *in practice* (anticompetitive measures, everything-as-a-service, EEE, etc.) are actually entirely out of scope of what copyleft even *can* do.
This is what home advantage looks like - a counterstrategy that hinges on the legal system that serves the wealthy, is never going to defeat them.
"Rather, their goal is to disrupt attempts to build communities outside of capitalism. And one could argue that that's capitalism's primary tactic: alienation."
Sure, but notably people have an intrinsic craving for community - and so the only way that capitalists *can* do this, is by taking advantage of inaction on the side of community builders. It makes capitalism a thing you need to actively defend a community from, but that is not a thing that happens in the vast majority of communities.
That doesn't mean it isn't possible - it just means you need to recognize it as a threat, and not expect it to sort itself out. If you build *and maintain* a robust enough community, there is nothing capitalists can do about that.
"It's a definite weakness, but exploiting it requires anticapitalists to do a far better job than we've been doing of embracing diversity."
Absolutely. This also directly relates to what I said earlier about people just copying the capitalist things - very few anticapitalists seem to even realize that they *need* to be thinking outside of the (capitalist) box, and shed its assumptions. It's a long-standing problem, and IMO one of the main reasons the movement has been ineffective in practice.
"Dealing with that would go a long way toward showing that there's a chance we can do it with larger, more complex scenarios."
Yes and no. I feel like you're treating 'ability to organize' as a static value here; like a skill at a fixed level that must be proven to demonstrate that you deserve to try out the bigger challenges.
But that's not really how it works - organizing is a collective skill, and like all skills, something that needs to be built up through practice. You don't start with the messy cases, you start with the simple ones and gain a foothold from there to understand and deal with progressively bigger problems.
I would not say that fedi is a "simple one". By this point it's large enough that it's quite difficult to cause ecosystem-wide change, and so I think treating it as a "you must solve this before proceeding" really just harms any ability to learn that skill, in the same way you can't expect a beginning programmer to successfully build an MMO.
In other words: we need to start *somewhere*. It doesn't matter where.
A separate but related point: the shittier companies are allowed to be, the more susceptible people will be to scams.
Because how do you expect people to distinguish between the scams that are state-sanctioned, and the ones that are not?
Things I love about biking as part of my commute:
Seeing other people not driving to work. The streets are covered in bikes and scooters. The bike trail has tons of folks walking to work and to the metro stations
Getting some exercise. It feels good to get moving first thing in the morning, and it's a great way to destress after work
It's just so much fun. I love biking
I feel like I'm part of my community. There are a couple of people working where I bike past that I smile at and they smile back. Seeing people playing in the park. Last week I bought lemonade from a kid. It's wonderful.
Also, I want to emphasize that shady shit in the marketing industry is so widespread that "the shadier side" doesn't refer to just a few companies; it refers to the shadier side that almost *every single* company in the marketing space has, ethical companies are vanishingly rare and the whole industry is Like This
I've been fascinated for a long time by how scams work, and perhaps the most revealing observation I've made is that the manipulation and deception involved is virtually *identical* to what the shadier side of the marketing industry (eg. microtransactions) does legally, the only difference is whether on paper you've gotten something for your money
@wmd@chaos.social https://askubuntu.com/a/138010 ? (Assuming Xorg)
language bashing, re: misogyny in the gaming industry
@chirpbirb There's this hypothesis that "bashing specific programming languages and the people who use them" (note: different from constructive criticism) is just a cover for misogyny, because the languages in question are those disproportionately used by women.
And wouldn't you know it, another frequent language-bashing loudmouth turns out to be misogynist.
If you're a white person and want to be an ally, you have other options than victim blaming.
Make sure your instance blocks racist abusers. Ask what measures they're taking to ensure the safety of BIPoC folk on your instance. Ask the developers of your instance's software what tools they're implementing to help combat racism. Ask them what demographic of people they're listening to when developing those tools (I can pretty much guarantee hardly any are listening to Black folk).
USpol, KOSA, Harris
see parent post: https://scholar.social/@so_treu/112877843513910811
abortion access
The Iowa abortion ban has gone into effect, and Iowans are going to Illinois for abortions. If you can donate to the Iowa Abortion Access Fund, that would be great:
I've probably asked this here before but…Linux geeks: Is there any such thing as a smart .forward replacement? What I mean is, I know that when an Email comes in, if the user has a file called .forward (for those whose screen readers mispronounce this, the file is called dot forward), that Email is forwarded to the Email addresses in that file. However, as far as I know, the forwarding happens for all incoming Emails, indiscriminately. For some situations this is okay, but there are situations where I want to ideally automatically forward Email to a person or list of people, but in case spammers ever get hold of that address I don't want that to get forwarded, as then that spam would appear to be coming from my server, and going to otherwise trusted/willing recipients. So does anyone know of any type of system that forwards Emails, but has some configurability, for example, only auto-forward Email from these trusted Email addresses, etc? Another possible solution would be some sort of web application that receives Emails to be forwarded and holds them in a queue pending my manual review, at which point I can add the sender to a trusted sender's list to be auto-forwarded, forward the Email, not forward it, add the sender to the naughty list so to speak, etc. Maybe @adam would know? Please boost for reach. Thanks.
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.
- No alt text (request) = no boost.
- Boosts OK for all boostable posts.
- DMs are open.
- Flirting welcome, but be explicit if you want something out of it!
- The devil doesn't need an advocate; no combative arguing in my mentions.
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.