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.
long, browser musings
@freakazoid Thanks for mentioning it, re: the first part :)
"I do think, though, that you may be underestimating how good capitalism is at coöpting any efforts to dilute its power."
I don't think I am, or more precisely, not to a degree that invalidates the strategy. I'm sure I'm not aware of every fine detail because nobody's understanding is perfect, but I've spent a lot of time identifying the weaknesses of capitalist systems, and I do have some history of beating capitalists at their own game (the most recent example being my involvement with the Freenode/Libera thing).
The problem I see with how a lot of people approach "fighting capitalism", is that they try to use capitalism's own ideas and mechanisms against it - but that's never going to work, because capitalists have home advantage there. This includes every "exact copy of <thing that exists>, but anti-capitalist" project. Those are doomed to get coopted.
But capitalism also has its weaknesses. Capitalist organizations are, for example, notoriously bad at building genuine community - they can try to emulate it, but their communities are always *at best* a shallow facsimile of the real thing, and people notice. Likewise, capitalism is bad at diversity; it needs an aligned, hierarchical strategy to function.
This opens up a number of axes along which capitalism can be fought; by building genuine community, and by doing so around projects that would be inconceivable in a capitalist environment.
An imperfect but easy-to-explain example would be youtube-dl/yt-dlp; a corporation would never be able to profitably maintain such a diverse set of support for different sites across the world, which is why it could only succeed as a community project and everyone else just slots into yt-dlp.
Likewise, corporations are very bad at adapting; they are slow to do so, and due to internal pressures often have to fit into a legacy mold. Fast-moving targets are hard for corporations to keep up with, and relatively much easier for community projects.
IMO, the key to a successful capitalist project that is difficult to co-opt, is to approach it in a way that is really only viably doable in a collective, community setting.
That requires thinking out of the box and trying new approaches, instead of the 'tried and tested' ones (which are almost always geared towards "what works for corporations", which is what we *don't* want).
"I think that while developers do bear a lot of the responsibility for OSS being "for nerds", a lot of that also comes from capitalism filling the "usability niche" and crowding out open source, if that makes any sense."
It does, but the blame for that IMO still squarely lies with the FOSS community. There is no reason FOSS software *can't* fill that niche, the barrier to doing so is a widespread culture of victim blaming; I've lost count of how many fruitless discussions I've had over the years with FOSS devs, trying to convince them that usability is even a thing they should be caring about.
This very closely relates to the toxic pseudo-merocratic (and in many ways mysogynist) culture of "how good you are at writing code decides whether you really belong here" - this has very often driven out the exact people who *would* have contributed towards better usability, because writing code wasn't their thing.
"If it weren't for the AGPL, I bet we'd already have a commercial fork of Mastodon with a bunch of usability and moderation features thrown in. That company would now "own" the Fediverse."
We already do, the platform is called Threads, and the company that owns it is Facebook, with the blessing of Eugen. The AGPL certainly hasn't stopped them from carrying out their takeover.
It's a very good example of how copyleft doesn't at all address the *actual* real-world cooptation vectors, which are social/hierarchical in nature, because the end result of this is basically indistinguishable from them making a proprietary code fork.
@strypey Because yes, if you participate in that, and you go and act all high and mighty because of how you are doing Super Important Political Work, people are absolutely in the right to *personally* call you out over that intensely shitty behaviour.
@strypey That is not what I said. Have you actually paid attention to what's going on? With people suddenly having >$300k to spend on an already well-funded election campaign while their neighbours have been struggling to collect a couple thousand for months?
And then when this is called out, they get basically told to be quiet because they are poor and, paraphrasing, they are disrupting the Important Stuff by asking for help to not die? While being called all sorts of vile shit, because people do not want to see the poor people in their nice virtual middle-class neighbourhood?
Every time an app complains that it can’t be ran if a phone is rooted it just makes me wonder how bad their shit really is if “we can trust everything from the client because it cannot lie to us because google said it is so” is what they rely on
honestly, “device attestation” is another one of those things makes it seem like the infosec community has just kind of given up
never trust data from the client, your system must be secure even if the client could lie to you! Unless I guess the machine is using magical pixie dust to make sure the client can never lie to you, making everything fine
@strypey Directing *what* money away from people in genuine need, exactly? The money you're implying people shouldn't send to anyone in the first place because "they might be a grifter"? That money?
Also, did you actually read the post I linked at all?
reference to transphobia, ableism
@freakazoid "Can't any concern be expressed as a need that the concerned individual simply won't accept is covered?"
Yes and no. That's possible in a literal sense, but preventing that isn't really the goal - the goal is to make it *obvious to bystanders* that that is what someone is doing.
Right now, it's too easy for someone to express vague non-specific 'concerns' about an accommodation for marginalized folks, playing into the rhetoric of the broader political conversation in society, and this is accepted at face value, because "someone is concerned and we should care about that".
This doesn't really work when you need to express things in terms of 'needs'; that requires being very specific, as to what the need for *you, personally* is - you can't handwave away the rationale, you can't play into existing political rhetoric, and this means that the need can actually be assessed on its own merits by bystanders.
As an example: "we should not allow trans women in women's bathrooms because women's safety" is a "concern" that sounds credible on the face of it, to a lot of people.
But when that is reframed as "I, as a woman, need safety in the bathroom", it invites asking in exactly what way that safety is currently not there, and "because of trans people" sounds like an obviously incomplete answer. It makes incomplete reasoning and rhetoric stand out. It also opens up room to say "it seems that the safety problems actually come from men".
Ultimately it still allows *making* bad faith arguments, that will always be possible, the goal here is just to change the circumstances so that defeating them is quickly done and takes little effort, as opposed to the usual pattern of "spending an hour explaining things to bystanders every time a troll spends 10 seconds throwing rhetoric around", which is how concern trolling sabotages discussions.
"Maybe just record the concern *as* a need (if it's expressable as one) and then require that anyone wanting to discard a solution in favor of another show how the favored solution meets the accepted set of needs better?"
That runs the risk of situations like "abled folks deciding what accommodations disabled folks need" (which will generally be accepted by the crowd) and similar things, and so would do very little to protect marginalized folks, who are the primary target of concern trolling.
I wonder to what degree concern trolling could be defeated (on a policy level) by outright banning 'concerns' in policy discussion and only allowing input to be expressed in terms of 'needs' (since that implicitly leaves open how to fulfill those needs, whereas 'concerns' attack a specific implementation and often imply another)
CW ableism (Pink News whistleblowing)
So it turns out Pink News's CEO has told staff to "be careful" hiring neurodivergent people because they'd use their disabilities to excuse poor performance and be hard to get rid of due to employment law. Solution: don't support this ableist rag.
See the whistleblower account on X for more:
@stapper @jalefkowit@vmst.io Given that it claims "end-to-end encryption" (that's not how any of that works!!) it's definitely being sent to a remote place *somewhere*
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.